Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd

Hunting Aerosurveys Ltd was a British aerial photography company. Its operations became more diversified under the name Hunting Surveys.

In memory of the July 1952 AS.40 Oxford (G-AIRZ) fatal crash in Kayl.

The firm incorporated Aerofilms Ltd and the Aircraft Operating Company.[1] In 1947 it was using three types of aircraft: Austers, a Percival Proctor and a D. H. Rapide and planned to acquire one or more Percival Mergansers. The company had contracts for work surveying for tin mining in Nigeria; oil in Arabia, Venezuela and Colombia; timber in Ontario; and mapping in Australia.[1]

Between 1957 and 1964, Hunting operated a specially converted Auster Autocar for smaller scale aerial survey work.[2]

In 1960 the firm was merged with Hunting Geophysics Ltd to form Hunting Surveys Ltd.[3] The Hunting Survey Group's military division became a maker of Trident submarine-launched ballistic missiles. In the 1990s the firm's international oil prospecting work including operations in Sudan.[4]

Hunting Surveys & Consultants Ltd announced the appointment of a liquidator in December 2001 and final dissolution in January 2003.[5]

References

  1. "Hunting Aerosurveys". Flight. 51 (1994): 215–6. 13 March 1947. Retrieved 2009-10-31.
  2. Jackson, 1973, p. 77
  3. "Hunting Survey Changes". Flight. 77 (2653): 87. 15 January 1960. Retrieved 2012-12-11.
  4. David Rose (January 2002) The Osama Files Vanity Fair
  5. Hunting Surveys & Consultants Ltd Duedil Retrieved 2012-12-11

Bibliography

  • Jackson, A.J. (1973). British Civil Aircraft since 1919, Volume 1. Putnam & Company Ltd. ISBN 0-370-10006-9.
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