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Coast Guard: 4 dead, 1 missing in fishing vessel's sinkingStory Highlights
Four crew members of Seattle-based Alaska Ranger died, Coast Guard says
Others were rescued, but one person is still unaccounted for, spokesman says
Boat was about 120 miles west of Dutch Harbor in remote Aleutian Islands
Ship was in seas of 6 to 8 feet (2 to 2.5 meters) and 30-mph winds
(CNN) -- Four crew members of a fishing vessel sinking off the coast of Alaska have died, a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman said Sunday.
A crew member of the Alaska Ranger is taken on board the Coast Guard Cutter Munro.
The Seattle, Washington-based Alaska Ranger began sinking about 2:50 a.m. Sunday with 47 people on board, said Chief Petty Officer Barry Lane, a Coast Guard spokesman.
Four of those had been confirmed dead by late morning, Lane said.
One person is still unaccounted for, said another Coast Guard spokesman, Lt. Eric Eggen.
The 180-foot processing trawler was about 120 miles west of Dutch Harbor, in the remote Aleutian Islands, when the crew reported being "overwhelmed by water" and abandoned ship, Eggen said.
Survivors were being taken aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Munro. A helicopter and a C-130 transport were also taking part in the effort, the service reported.
The ship was in seas of 6 to 8 feet and 30-mph winds, Lane said. Temperatures were near freezing.
State regulators were informed that the vessel was carrying 145,000 gallons of diesel when it went under in deep seas, Leslie Pearson of the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation told The Associated Press.
The fishing industry is perennially among the most deadly in the United States. In 2005, 48 fishermen died, up from 38 the year before, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That made it the nation's most dangerous occupation for the year, with a fatality rate of 118.4 per 100,000 -- nearly 30 times higher than the rate of the average worker. E-mail to a friend