As investigators continue analyzing the aftermath of the Air Canada Flight 8646 crash, a new and unsettling detail is beginning to emerge — one tied not to the cause of the disaster, but to who survived, and where they were sitting.

Preliminary mapping of the aircraft’s seating layout suggests a pattern of survival clustered across specific rows, raising questions about how the impact affected different sections of the plane.

A Pattern Within the Wreckage

Using passenger manifests, wreckage distribution, and survivor locations, investigators have begun reconstructing where individuals were seated at the time of impact.

What they found was not random.

According to sources, survivors appear to be concentrated in a narrow section of the aircraft, while adjacent rows experienced significantly higher fatality rates.

“It’s not uniform,” one aviation analyst said. “There’s a clear variation depending on location.”

Why Certain Rows?

Experts caution that survival in crashes is influenced by multiple factors, including:

Impact angle of the aircraft
Break points in the fuselage
Proximity to structural reinforcement zones
And whether a section remained partially intact during deceleration

In this case, investigators believe a specific portion of the aircraft may have absorbed or deflected energy differently, creating what is sometimes referred to as a “survivable pocket.”

“In rare cases, a small section of the cabin can experience slightly less force,” one expert explained. “That difference, even if minimal, can determine survival.”

The Disturbing Contrast

What makes the pattern particularly unsettling is how sharply survival appears to change between nearby rows.

Passengers seated just a few rows apart may have experienced dramatically different outcomes — a reality that investigators say reflects the chaotic nature of high-impact crashes.

“It’s not about luck alone,” one source said. “It’s about physics — and very small differences in position.”

A Closer Look at the Aircraft Structure

Teams are now examining how the aircraft’s structure behaved during impact, focusing on:

Where the fuselage fractured
Which sections remained partially intact
And how seats, restraints, and surrounding structures responded

These findings may help explain why certain rows show a higher survival rate — and whether any design or safety factors played a role.

What This Means for the Investigation

Authorities emphasize that the seating pattern does not explain the cause of the crash, but it may provide critical insight into how the event unfolded inside the cabin.

It also contributes to a broader understanding of survivability — knowledge that can inform future safety measures.

The Question That Remains

As investigators continue their analysis, one reality is becoming clear:

Survival in this crash was not evenly distributed.

And now, one difficult question remains:

Why did those specific rows make the difference — when just a few feet away, the outcome was completely different?