Delta Airlines has offered $30.000 in compensation to each passenger who was on board a plane that crashed in Toronto, Canada.
As it landed, the burning plane skidded along the runway, then flipped upside down and came to a stop.
All 80 people on the flight from Minneapolis - 76 passengers and four crew members - survived.
The passengers were astonished, as most of them escaped unharmed.
It remains unclear what caused the incident, which is under investigation.
There were 76 passengers and four crew members on the flight, traveling from Minneapolis.
The cash offer has nothing to do with customers' obligations and does not affect their rights, a Delta spokesperson said.
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The flight crew and rescuers were praised for their quick rescue of the passengers.
The plane's various safety features also contributed to the fact that no one was killed, experts say.
All but one of the 21 passengers who were taken to the hospital had been released by Wednesday morning, the airline said.
The crew was experienced and trained for these conditions, the head of Delta Air Lines told CBS News.
"They acted heroically, but also as expected of them," said Ed Bastian, the airline's CEO.
Experts who have reviewed the footage have several theories about what caused the accident, including harsh winter weather and the high speed at which the plane was traveling.
One passenger described the incident as a "turbulent event" and that he heard the sound of "concrete and metal" at the moment of impact.
Another said that passengers were left hanging upside down from their seats "like bats."
Watch video: Passenger filmed exiting crashed plane in Toronto
The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder were recovered from the plane's wreckage.
The investigation is being led by the Canadian Transportation Safety Board (TSB), with support from US officials.
The accident was the fourth major air incident in North America in just three weeks.
On Wednesday, February 19, two people were killed in Arizona when two small planes collided.
Experts still insist that air travel is safer than other forms of transportation.
This was also emphasized by US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, who told CBS that incidents do not occur in a pattern, but that each one is "completely unique."
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