I'm not asking about other parts of the plane, passengers, or whatever else.
There were reports that one of the engines was found (not in tiny pieces) far from the impact site.
Is there specific information which shows those reports to be untrue ?
If there's nothing definitive, no problem. Remains an open book until there is.
This is a classic example of the anomaly hunting fallacy, as far as I can see. We know that Flight 93 was boarded by four individuals with known connections to al-Qaeda, that it was hijacked by people with Middle Eastern appearances and accents, that it diverted from its course, that the passengers attacked the hijackers and attempted to break into the cockpit, that it crashed near Shanksville, and that about 95% of the remains of the airliner together with sufficient human remains to identify all the crew and passengers were recovered from the crash site. That, for anybody sane, is enough to state that we understand broadly what happened. However, the conspiracy theorist needs to manufacture doubt, even where none exists, in order to give the false impression that some other interpretation of events is plausible. Therefore, he asks for an additional level of detail to that which is already known. In this case, we have accounts that suggest that an entire engine was found in a pond 300 yards from the main crash site, and others that suggest that it was not an entire engine but rather a significant part of that engine. The conspiracy theorist will spin this into a suggestion that, because we have not identified beyond possible doubt this one small, and in fact irrelevant, detail (neither a more-or-less entire engine nor a large part of an engine being found 300 yards from the main crash site would be in any way unexpected from the dynamics of the crash), this one area of doubt renders
the entire sequence of events unproven. Hence, the crash "remains an open book" until no conspiracy theorist can conceive of any anomaly, however trivial, that is not clearly resolved in an official report with links to incontravertible evidence (which, since any evidence can in principle be faked, is a non-existent concept for the conspiracy theorist in any case).
Now, femr2, it would be polite at least to state the purpose of your question. If it turns out that the reports of an entire engine being found about 300 yards from the crash site are inaccurate and in fact it was only a part of an engine, what are the implications of this discovery? If it turns out, conversely, that it was not a part but an entire engine, what are the implications? And finally, if neither is substantiated, and there is in fact no verifiable evidence of
any sizeable part of the plane having been found outside the main crash site, what then?
(Since there are no reports of
significantly sized parts of the plane being found
anywhere else, it would be rational to assume that's not a consideration here. Please, please don't tell me that your contention is something along the lines that if one report says that part of an engine was found 300 yards away and another report says that a whole engine was found 300 yards away, the contradiction means that we must consider the possibility that both engines were found six miles away.)
Dave