- A coroner is trying to determine if the girl died from the crash or a "secondary incident"
- Saturday marked the pilot's first time landing a Boeing 777 at the San Francisco airport
- NTSB: The plane was well below the target air speed for approach
- Pilots called for a "go-around" 1.5 seconds before impact, the NTSB says
San Francisco (CNN) -- The pilot of the Asiana Airlines flight that crashed in San Francisco over the weekend had no experience landing a Boeing 777 at that airport. And one of the two teens who died after the crash may have been run over by a first responder's vehicle.
The revelations are the latest in a flurry of developments from the crash at San Francisco International Airport that killed two 16 year-old girls from China and sent 182 people to the hospital Saturday.
Questions surround tragedy
News that an emergency vehicle may have struck the teen girl came from the San Francisco Fire Department, San Mateo County Coroner Robert Foucrault said.
"Part of our examination is to determine the cause of death. Our examination will determine whether it was from the airplane crash or secondary incident," Foucrault said.
Asiana identified the two deceased girls as Ye Mengyuan and Wang Linjia. They were among 35 Chinese students headed to California to attend West Valley Christian School's summer church camp, the school said on its website.
Pilot's flight record
The pilot who was landing Asiana Airlines Flight 214 was making his first descent with a Boeing 777 at the San Francisco airport, the airline said.
But it wasn't his first time flying to San Francisco nor his first time in control of a 777.
Lee Kang-kuk, the pilot who was in the captain's seat, had flown from Seoul to San Francisco several times between 1999 and 2004, the airline said.
Including the flight Saturday, Lee flew a Boeing 777 nine times, clocking a total of 43 hours on that model of aircraft, Asiana said. He has piloted a total of about 10,000 hours, the airline said.
Lee was one of four pilots on board who were working in shifts Saturday.
South Korean and U.S. investigators will jointly question Lee on Monday, said Choi Jeong-ho, the head of South Korean's Aviation Policy Bureau.
They will also question Lee Jeong-min, who was sitting in the co-pilot's seat, Choi said.
Clues from the voice recorder
The cockpit voice and flight data recorders showed the flight was coming in too slow and too low and that the pilots apparently sped up seven seconds before impact, the National Transportation Safety Board said Sunday.
Four seconds before impact, a stall warning sounded -- warning the pilots the plane was about to lose its ability to stay in the air.
The voice recorder apparently showed the pilots tried to abort the landing less than two seconds before the plane crashed, NTSB head Deborah Hersman said.
The crew then made an internal decision "to initiate a go-around 1.5 seconds to impact," she said.
When asked if pilot error was to blame, Hersman said the crash landing was still under investigation.
"I would discourage anyone from drawing any conclusions at this point," she said.
The NTSB has ruled out weather as a problem and said that conditions were right for a "visual landing."
Officials are investigating whether construction at the airport may have played a role.
Construction to extend a runway safety area temporarily shut off the so-called glide slope system, which is one of several options pilots have to help them land planes safely, Hersman said.
The frightening crash
With no warning from the cockpit, survivors said, the plane slammed onto the edge of the runway near the seawall. The impact severed the plane's tail and sent the rest of the body spinning on its belly.
When rescuers arrived, they found some passengers coming out of the water, said city fire chief Joanne Hayes-White.
"There was a fire on the plane, so the assumption might be that they went near the water's edge, which is very shallow, to maybe douse themselves with water," she said.
Amateur video obtained exclusively by CNN shows the plane crashing and spinning counterclockwise and coming to a stop. Fred Hayes said he shot the video about a mile from the crash scene.
In all, 182 people were hospitalized. Their injuries ranged from severe road rash to paralysis.
"We're lucky"
The crash, followed by flames and clouds of smoke spewing from the destroyed roof, left many fearing the worst.
But 123 of the 307 people on board walked away uninjured.
"We're lucky there hasn't been a greater loss of life," the fire chief said.
Medical personnel were also expecting more casualties.
"We were expecting a lot of burns, but we didn't see them," said Dr. Margaret Knudson, San Francisco General Hospital's chief of surgery. Six survivors were in critical condition at the hospital Sunday.
Many of the injured said they were sitting toward the rear of the aircraft, said Knudson. Several suffered abdominal injuries and spine fractures, some of which include paralysis and head trauma, she said.
Passenger Benjamin Levy said he was bracing for more trauma but ended up walking away from the wreck.
"Honestly, I was waiting for the plane to ... start flipping upside down, in which case I think a lot of people would have not made it," Levy said.
"If we flipped, none of us would be here to talk about it."
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