The latest 5.5-magnitude aftershock was felt across the border in India and Bangladesh, triggering a fresh wave of panic among the devastated people in Nepal who have been forced to stay in the open for over three weeks now.
Earlier today, seven milder aftershocks were felt as death toll from the Tuesday temblor rose to 136.
Nepal Army rescue team spotted wrecked parts of the US Marine Corps UH-1 Huey, that went missing from the remote and rugged area of Gorthali village in Sindhupalchowk district since Tuesday when the second powerful temblor struck, yesterday on a steep slope of the mountainside.
The parts of the Huey - a helicopter dating back to the Vietnam War era - were found scattered around at 11,200-feet altitude, Nepal Army said.
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Eight bodies have also been recovered from the crash site - all of them charred and in a state beyond recognition, the Army said in a statement.
The remains would soon be transferred to Kathmandu, Nepal Army spokesman Jagadish Pokharel said.
The chopper carrying two Nepalese Army personnel and six US Marines to deliver aid and relief materials in Charikot and Dolakha, two of the districts most affected by the quakes, had crashed in the mountainous region of Sindhupalchowk, it said.
Both the US and Nepalese Army have reached the site, though the real cause of the crash is not yet known.
"Together we mourn as our nation and the Federal Republic of Nepal have lost eight courageous men. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families," said commander of the US Pacific Command Admiral Samuel J Locklear.
Investigation is underway in this regard, according to the Army statement.