A preliminary report into last month's fiery Emirates plane crash in Dubai found that the pilot attempted to take off again after briefly touching down but the jet slammed back onto the runway at 144 mph.
One firefighter was killed responding to the accident, which destroyed the Boeing 777-300, but all 300 people on board Flight EK521 managed to escape.
The Aug. 3 crash was the most serious in Emirates' more than three decades of operations, and was the second major air disaster for a Dubai government-backed airline in less than five months.
Image: Plane crash landed in Dubai airport
The findings were released Tuesday in a 28-page report by the United Arab Emirates' General Civil Aviation Authority.
Investigators found that the crew received a warning indicating wind shear — a sudden change in wind speed or direction — as the plane approached Dubai on its return from Thiruvananthapuram, India. As it neared the ground, a headwind started to shift to a tailwind and then back again.
The right landing gear hit the ground first, with the left following only three seconds later, according to the report. The nose gear stayed in the air.
A warning system alerted the crew of a "long landing," indicating that the plane had not touched down where it was supposed to, and the plane took to the air again as the crew tried to make a second landing attempt.
Six seconds into the air, the crew began to retract the landing gear.
After making it only about 85 feet off the ground, the twin-engine plane began to lose altitude. Three seconds before impact, the crew tried to push the jet engines all the way from an idle to full power.
Cockpit warnings blared "Don't sink, don't sink!" as the engines began to throttle up — but it was too late.
With the landing gear still retracting, the back of the plane and then the engines hit the runway at 144 miles per hour.
A fuel-fed fire broke out as the right engine was ripped off and the plane skidded on its belly before coming to a rest