The Tu-154 jet, whose passengers included more than 60 members of the internationally-renowned Red Army Choir who were heading to entertain Russian troops in Syria for the New Year, went down off the resort city of Sochi shortly after take-off yesterday.
The first 10 bodies have been flown in to the capital Moscow amid a national outpouring of grief.
Investigators have yet to confirm the cause of the crash, but Transport Minister Maksim Sokolov told a televised briefing yesterday that authorities do not believe the plane was taken out by a terrorist attack.
"Currently the main versions do not include an act of terror," he added.
More than three thousand workers laboured through the night, racing to find the remaining bodies and debris - including the black boxes crucial to tracking the plane's final moments - before the currents carry them further away from shore.
The search operation included 39 vessels covering over 100 square kilometres, with planes, helicopters and drones searching from above and deep-water equipment and divers hunting below the surface.
"When we find the plane, we will raise the flight recorders to the surface. We know they are located in the tail and I am sure that the tail was damaged the least," he said.
Sokolov said some of the bodies could have already been carried off by the current to Abkhazia, the separatist region of Georgia.
"Eleven bodies and 154 (body) fragments were found over the first day," defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said in a briefing.
Along with the first ten bodies, 86 body parts were flown to the capital for DNA analysis, he added.
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