My theory...
After staying up all night watching MSNBC and talking to a couple of investigators on this sorta thing, I've devised my own theory...
After seeing pictures of the percipitation in the area, I don't believe that to have caused too much of an issue, it wouldn't be anything that the planes boots (Inflatable rubber tubes on the front end of the wing that break off ice on a smaller planes that can't produce the extra air a jet engine can to feed it through heated tubes to act as a de-icer) couldn't handle. What's more interesting to me is that SEVERAL eye witnesses saw an engine on fire prior to "touch down", which, historically is EXTREMELY rare... I believe that on approach (they were ~4-5 mi out) a large gust of wind (also reported, a couple witnesses saying roughly 25 - 30 mph gusts on the ground) was able to alter the airflow over the wings causing a stall, and at ~1500 - 2000 feet, you don't have much time to recover. The pilot then was forced to take the extreme angle of attack he was at (estimated to be > 45 degrees) and increase engine power to regain airflow and airspeed. The pilot could have instinctually added full power to an engine (although a no-no, with little room to recover, I'd be wanting all the help I could get) causing one of the engines to overheat and catch fire (backed up by a couple eye witnesses saying they heard a high-pitched noise, one describing it as a "high pitched squeal, similar to an earthquake" which, sounds like a weird way to describe it, but if you've ever heard a turbo runnin on decent power, you know something of what he's talking about.). Before you reply going "Overheating an engine takes a while!!" think also that this plane was a dual engine turbo prop, and was almost through with its flight, who knows what the engine temperature was before the incident, and how quickly an engine of this particular model heats at full power... Although that would be a result of the initial stall. I'm forseeing this crash to be labled as a weather related incident...
Another possibility though...
Pilot went through a dense pack of cold air causing near instantanious icing which the boots couldn't break through (that's ALOT of ice in case you don't know... although possible, unlikely) causing an airflow disturbance over the top of the wings, again, resulting in an annoying voice saying "Stall Stall Stall" And maybe later... "Sink rate... Pull Up."
I'm making speculations here, but I believe that both cases that I bring up (although having the same result...stall) are supported by eye-witness accounts and the little evidence we have so far.
My thoughts and prayers go out to the families, and to the heroic men and women who responded to this tragedy...
Another interesting tidbit here though...
Looking through different things, it seems that plane crashes seem to come in threes...Right now we're at two, one heroic story of amazing piloting, and one mystery tragedy...
This is most likely icing that could not be controlled with the anti-ice and de-ice systems installed on the aircraft.
I'm not familiar with the Q400 but I doubt it had hot wings and tail. Probably pneumatic boots.
I'm quite familier with the Q400, it has, as I mentions, pneumatic boots.
It also has the best service record, with the only blot on it being the slight landing gear issue in Europe which was promptly fixed.