[size=11][color=#000000]On a blustery night 65 years ago, Frank Sutliffe and Richard Heimann heard the roar of airplane engines over their Mill Valley homes followed by a flash of light on the side of Mount Tamalpais. The two 12-year-olds talked about it the next day with their buddies at Park School and decided they would check it out after the bell rang.
Little did they know that they would be the first to stumble upon a haunting scene of mangled metal, charred supplies and burned flesh.
Sutliffe and Heimann, now 77, are two of the boys who found the wreckage of a Navy seaplane that crashed and killed all eight aboard Nov. 30, 1944. Last week they were intrigued to hear that a group of pilots from Gnoss Field in Novato and a park ranger who is an expert in Marin plane crashes recently trekked to the remote site to mark the crash's 65th anniversary.
"I wonder what's still up there," Heimann said. "I bet there are a lot of bits and pieces left."