The story he told officials was even more incredible.
The 16-year-old apparently hitched a ride from San Jose, California, to Maui, Hawaii, in the landing-gear wheel well of a Boeing 767, Hawaiian Airlines said Sunday.
'Our primary concern now is for the well-being of the boy, who is exceptionally lucky to have survived,' the airline said.
He certainly is.
If his story pans out - and the FBI has been called in to investigate - he rode in the tiny cramped compartment for almost five hours, at altitudes that reached 38,000 feet, without oxygen and under subzero temperatures.
That has some experts questioning his story.
'It sounds really incredible,' said aviation expert Jeff Wise. 'Being in a wheel well is like all of a sudden being on top of Mount Everest.'
Between the oxygen depletion and the cold, life expectancy 'is measured in minutes,' Wise said.
But some people have survived. A study by the Federal Aviation Administration looked at 10 wheel-well passenger stowaways between 1947 and 1993, involving flights as high as 39,000 feet. Five people survived. The conditions put them in a virtual 'hibernative' state, the report said.
'For somebody to survive multiple hours with that lack of oxygen and that cold is just miraculous,' airline analyst Peter Forman told CNN affiliate KHON in Honolulu on Monday.
Videos bear out events Still, several parts of the boy's story pan out.
Authorities don't know who the boy is. He didn't have an ID. The only thing he did have on him was a comb.
He told authorities he was from Santa Clara, California, and ran away from home Sunday morning, said FBI Special Agent Tom Simon.
Investigators have surveillance camera footage of him hopping the fence at San Jose International Airport.
There's also camera footage of him walking across the ramp in San Jose toward the Hawaiian aircraft, the California airport said.
He told investigators he crawled into the wheel well of the plane and lost consciousness when the plane took off.
An hour after the plane landed at Kahului Airport, the boy regained consciousness and emerged to a 'dumbfounded' ground crew, Simon said.
The Maui airport has video of him crawling out of the left main gear area.
'It makes no sense to me,' Simon said.
The teen hasn't been charged with a federal crime, and was placed with child protective services.
Deadly incidents
In February, crews at Dulles International Airport in suburban Washington found the body of a man inside the landing-gear wheel well of an Airbus A340 operated by South African Airways.
In 2010, a 16-year-old boy died after he fell out of the wheel well of a US Airways flight that was landing at Boston's Logan International Airport.
Around the world, many of the people who attempt wheel well stowaways are looking to escape their countries through international flights
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