Steve Fossett calls home to South Dakota after landing his balloon on a farmer’s field in Canada in 1996, ending his bid to be the first to circle the globe nonstop. Six years later, he became the first person to fly around the world alone in a balloon. (Peter Walsh / Associated Press)
Fossett thanks his crew on Jan. 8, 1996, before his attempt to fly around the world solo in a balloon. Two days later, he had to abort the quest after running off course and out of power. (Johnny Sundby / Associated Press)
Fossett stands next to his balloon “Solo Spirit,” on Aug. 7, 1998, at a soccer stadium in Argentina, before launching his fourth bid to fly around the world in a balloon. He traveled about 15,200 miles before becoming caught in a severe storm and plunging 29,000 feet into the Coral Sea. “The consequences in this around-the-world ballooning are so severe. I’m not sure I should keep doing it every year, taking this risk,” he said after his rescue. (Eduardo Di Baia / Associated Press)
Fossett checks one of the battens that snapped off his double-hull vessel PlayStation in 71-mph winds in December 1999. He and a nine-member crew were a mere eight hours into attempting to break the transatlantic sailing record when a burst of wind disabled the sail and nearly sank the boat. (Peter Ventrone / Associated Press)
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Fossett’s Playstation, right, heads out of Barcelona’s port on Dec. 31, 2000, in the Race of the Millennium, a $2-million around-the-world contest. The $5.5 million vessel, designed in Newport Beach, dropped out of the race 14 days later because of equipment failure. (Cesar Rangel / Associated Press)
The Spirit of Freedom lands in the Australian outback on July 4, 2002, two days after Fossett made history with his solo balloon flight around the world. He spent nearly two weeks aloft in the unpressurized gondola that was smaller than a prison cell. (Rob Griffith / Associated Press)
Fossett pilots his GlobalFlyer over the Grand Canyon on his way to a record-setting landing in Kansas on March 3, 2005. Sixty-seven hours after taking off, he became the first pilot to circle the globe nonstop, alone and without refueling. (Thierry Boccon-Gibod / Associated Press)
Richard Branson, left, welcomes Fossett after mechanical problems forced him to land at Bournemouth International Airport in southern England on Feb. 11, 2006. Nevertheless, the 61-year-old piloted his lightweight experimental plane, Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer, to a record of 26,389 miles in about 76 hours. (Ben Stansall / Associated Press)
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Ive chosen these sports sailboat racing, gliding, ballooning and the fact that theyre dangerous is just a disadvantage that I have to live with. I dont enjoy the risks. I spend a lot of time trying to reduce the risks, Fossett told Newsweek in 2003. He’s shown in 2006 next to the Virgin Atlantic Global Flyer aircraft that he flew solo nonstop around the world in 2005 yet another record for the adventurer. (Shawn Thew / EPA)