LAS CRUCES, New Mexico (AP) Authorities are investigating the cause of a freight train derailment in southern New Mexico that killed three railroad employees when the train's locomotive plunged 40 feet (12 meters) down a ravine.
Police on Sunday identified the three as 38-year-old Donald White, 60-year-old Steven Corse and 50-year-old Ann Thompson. White lived in Silver City, New Mexico, and Corse and Thompson lived in the northern Arizona community of Paulden.
No other people were on the train.
State Police spokesman Emmanuel T. Gutierrez said it's unknown what caused Saturday afternoon's derailment near the community of Bayard, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) northwest of Las Cruces. It's unclear what preceded the derailment.
The eight rail cars being pulled by the locomotive weren't forced into the ravine. Instead, they remained either on or near the tracks. At least half of the eight train cars had tilted on their sides, but none of the iron ore being carried by the train had spilled out.