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Researchers Identify Fragment of Amelia Earhart’s Plane

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  • Researchers Identify Fragment of Amelia Earhart’s Plane

    They have had the 'artifact' since 1991, but have finally made a positive ID of it. The scrap of aluminum was used to cover one of the rear navigational windows on her Electra. Pretty cool.



    October 29, 2014

    Researchers Identify Fragment of Amelia Earhart’s Plane
    By Sarah Pruitt

    In June 1937, Amelia Earhart departed from Miami, Florida, on her second attempt to circumnavigate the globe along the equator. In a Miami Herald photograph of her twin-engined Lockheed Electra taking off for San Juan, Puerto Rico, on the morning of June 1, a shiny metal patch covers one of the back windows of the plane. By linking that metal patch to a scrap of aluminum found on the remote Pacific atoll of Nikumaroro, researchers have provided a tantalizing new clue in the enduring mystery of Earhart’s disappearance.

    After departing from Miami on June 1, 1937, Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, completed nearly 22,000 miles of their attempted circumnavigation of the globe, making stops in South America, Africa, India and Lae, New Guinea. On July 2, they took off from Lae for their next target destination, tiny Howland Island in the Pacific. The distance from Lae to Howland Island was about the same as a transcontinental flight across the United States. Somewhere during the journey over the vast Pacific Ocean, the Lockheed Electra plane disappeared. A massive land, air and sea search failed to turn up evidence of Earhart, Noonan or the plane, and their fate remains a subject of endless speculation.

    The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR), which has spent the last 25 years investigating Earhart’s ill-fated final voyage, recently focused its attention on a scrap of aluminum recovered in 1991 from the uninhabited Pacific atoll of Nikumaroro, located some 350 miles southeast of Howland Island. To them, it appeared as if the metal sheet could be the same patch of metal that appears in the Miami Herald photograph of Earhart’s Electra, covering one of the rear navigational windows.

    Known as Artifact 2-2-V-1, the metal scrap found on Nikumaroro is 19 inches wide and 23 inches long, and has a distinctive pattern of rivets. To test their hypothesis, TIGHAR researchers traveled to Wichita Air Services in Newton, Kansas to compare the dimensions and features of the sheet of metal to the components of a Lockheed Electra being restored to airworthy condition. They found that the rivets and other features of Artifact 2-2-V-1 appeared to match those of the patch that would have been used to fix Earhart’s plane. In a press release this week, TIGHAR explained: “The patch was an expedient field modification. Its dimensions, proportions, and pattern of rivets were dictated by the hole to be covered and the structure of the aircraft. The patch was as unique to [Earhart’s] particular aircraft as a fingerprint is to an individual.”
    According to a summary on TIGHAR’s website, the hypothesis of the organization’s long-running Earhart Project is that Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, did not—as is commonly believed—crash in the Pacific Ocean when they ran out of fuel somewhere near Howland Island. Instead, they made a forced landing on Nikumaroro, then known as Gardner Island. Earhart (and possibly Noonan) then lived for a time as castaways before eventually dying on the atoll.

    The positive identification of Artifact 2-2-V-1 as a fragment of Earhart’s plane would support this hypothesis, as well as the possibility that a sonar anomaly detected at a depth of 600 feet off Nikumaroro during TIGHAR’s last expedition is the rest of Earhart’s plane. Though an ambitious month-long trip to Nikumaroro (with a proposed $2 million budget) that TIGHAR planned for this fall was postponed due to lack of funding, the organization has scheduled a more modest expedition for June 2015 to conduct underwater searches for the aircraft as well as on-land searches for an initial campsite.
    When the government pays, the government controls.

  • #2
    Interesting,
    I wonder if they did indeed live on the atoll for a while.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by ARIX View Post
      Interesting,
      I wonder if they did indeed live on the atoll for a while.
      It's starting to look that way... and if so, it's likely their bodies were picked clean by crabs.

      When the government pays, the government controls.

      Comment


      • #4


        I could certainly believe it. Shame no land search was done soon after. If one or both survived it would have been tough being castaways, even if you have all the right gear, depending on the injuries sustained during the potential crash. I would think it was a water landing that disabled the radio or someone with a radio would have heard when the searches began.

        Comment


        • #5
          seems like they may have known about this for some time, but released it to get the funding they needed to go to the island.
          "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
          "A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler

          Comment


          • #6
            I've always been fascinated with this story. Pretty cool to see some developments finally. What's odd to me is that they found those remains in 1940, yet no one thought to put the pieces together back then??

            Maybe in 2091 someone will stumble on some 777 wreckage too!
            70' Chevelle RagTop
            (Forever Under Construction)



            "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.”- Thomas A Edison

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            • #7
              There is a rumor that has been going around through the South Pacific for years that she went down by Yap.

              Comment


              • #8
                Lies, I tell you! I saw that episode of Star Trek: Voyager. It has been well documented she was abducted by aliens.


                Edit: I believe that island has no fresh water supply, if I remember the last documentary correctly. If so they would have only been able to survive a few days, maybe a week depending on injuries and what water they had with them. But it was aliens, so it is a moot point.
                I don't like Republicans, but I really FUCKING hate Democrats.


                Sex with an Asian woman is great, but 30 minutes later you're horny again.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by LANTIRN View Post
                  Lies, I tell you! I saw that episode of Star Trek: Voyager. It has been well documented she was abducted by aliens.


                  Edit: I believe that island has no fresh water supply, if I remember the last documentary correctly. If so they would have only been able to survive a few days, maybe a week depending on injuries and what water they had with them. But it was aliens, so it is a moot point.
                  Making drinkable water is very easy, especially when salt water is all around.

                  A pot or something to boil in, A tube or something to allow the steam to condense, and something for the water to collect in, and a fire is all you need.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by sc281 View Post
                    Making drinkable water is very easy, especially when salt water is all around.

                    A pot or something to boil in, A tube or something to allow the steam to condense, and something for the water to collect in, and a fire is all you need.
                    Catching rain water

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by sc281 View Post
                      Making drinkable water is very easy, especially when salt water is all around.

                      A pot or something to boil in, A tube or something to allow the steam to condense, and something for the water to collect in, and a fire is all you need.

                      Well sure, if you happen to have all that stuff laying around after crash landing in the ocean. lol

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by talisman View Post
                        Well sure, if you happen to have all that stuff laying around after crash landing in the ocean. lol
                        Yeah and even then there is a lot of problems to figure out. Especially if no shade/decent clothes...etc.
                        Originally posted by MR EDD
                        U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by talisman View Post
                          Well sure, if you happen to have all that stuff laying around after crash landing in the ocean. lol
                          I just LMAO!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by talisman View Post
                            Well sure, if you happen to have all that stuff laying around after crash landing in the ocean. lol
                            Any of those can be improvised with what's around you. A tube is more efficient, but anything the steam can touch will condense. Just put it at an angle that runs down to whatever you are storing your water in.

                            Plenty of others too:

                            Collecting rain water like Denny said
                            Morning dew on leaves
                            Coconuts a la Cast Away
                            Tapping trees
                            Sand filtering

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I still think they were taken by aliens.

                              sigpic

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