Three Americans died in the Alps air crash that killed 150 people, the US state department has confirmed.
Two of the victims have been named as Yvonne Selke and her adult daughter Emily Selke.
A third person was not being identified until their family was notified, the state department said.
The Airbus A320 crashed on Tuesday after an eight-minute rapid descent. There were no survivors.
An early analysis of one flight recorder has not shed light into the cause of the crash.
The German, French and Spanish leaders have arrived together in the French Alps to visit the scene on Wednesday.#
After
arriving near the crash site, President Hollande, Chancellor Merkel and
Prime Minister Rajoy thanked the rescue workers for their efforts in
difficult circumstances.
Earlier, the "black box" cockpit voice recorder was recovered by a helicopter team at the site near Digne.
French investigators say usable data has been extracted from the
device but it has so far yielded no clues as to the cause of the plane's
crash.
Remi Jouty, the director of the French aviation
investigative agency, said there were sounds and voices on the cockpit
voice recorder but that it was too early to draw any conclusions.
He
said controllers observed the plane beginning to descend and tried to
get back in contact with the pilots but without success.
The second black box - the flight data recorder - has not yet been found.
The
older Ms Selke was employed by Booz Allen Hamilton as a contractor with
the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), the Pentagon's
satellite mapping office.
"Yvonne was a wonderful co-worker and a
dedicated employee who spent her career with the firm," Booz Allen's
chief personnel officer, Betty Thompson, said in a statement.
Drexel University said in a statement that Emily Selke graduated with honours in 2013 and was a music industry major.
Her
sorority, Gamma Sigma Sigma, said in a statement on its Facebook page
it was moruning the loss of Selke, who "always put others before herself
and cared deeply for all those in her life".
Footage shot from a helicopter on Tuesday showed plane parts scattered on the rocky mountainside.
"The site is a picture of horror," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said after being flown over the crash site.
Germanwings
chief executive Thomas Winkelmann said 72 Germans were amongst the
dead, although the list was being constantly updated.
The Spanish government has raised the number of known Spanish victims in the crash from 49 to at least 51.
Additionally,
UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond confirmed that three Britons were
on board. The flight was also carrying citizens of the Australia, Japan,
Colombia, Turkey, Denmark, the Netherlands and Belgium.
Cockpit Voice Recorder of flight 4U9525
Key points
Weather reportedly good when A320 Airbus came down
Plane descended rapidly but sent out no distress signal
Bereaved relatives are expected to visit the scene on Wednesday. The
mayor of Seyne-les-Alpes, the town nearest the crash site, said local
families were offering to host them.
The German victims included 16 pupils returning from an exchange trip.
A
day of mourning is being held at the Joseph-Koenig-Gymnasium school in
Haltern-am-See, north-west Germany, where the pupils studied.
The
BBC's Tom Burridge says they listened to a German song which their
friends had played to them and a Catalan poem was read out.
Germanwings,
a low-cost airline owned by Germany's main carrier Lufthansa, said some
crew members were unfit for service on Wednesday "due to emotional
distress".
It said one flight was being cancelled but remaining flights would be according to schedule.
Lufthansa and Germanwings staff held a minute's silence on Wednesday morning.
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