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  • Amelia Earhart mystery Solved!

    Syndicated Content - Vertical Acuity - WLOX.com - The News for South Mississippi

    New evidence shows that Earhart did not just disappear but survived on a Pacific island. (Wikimedia/Wikimedia commons)

    Amelia Earhart lived with navigator Fred Noonan for days or longer on a Pacific island, ending the theory that she simply vanished, new evidence suggests.

    The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, the group investigating the disappearance, said Friday that new evidence of SOS signals and artifacts had been found on the island.

    The group presented the new evidence Friday at a three-day conference that presented new research about Earhart's expedition across the globe.

    The researchers says that previously dismissed distress signals may have actually been real, reported the Christian Science Monitor, and that Earhart and her partner's location could be traced to a tiny Pacific "atoll."

    The atoll was known then as Gardner Island but is now called Nikumaroro Island. Earhart's plane is thought to have landed on the tiny Pacific reef but later been washed away by a rising tide.

    According to UPI, Earhart apparently sent out 57 signals for help, most of which were previously dismissed as bogus.

    Discovery reported that further evidence of Earhart's demise on the tiny strip of land was the discovery of a cosmetic jar of anti-freckle cream.

    The jar was found on the island and it is well-known that Earhart had freckles that she detested.

    It was previously believed that Earhart has simply "vanished" on July 2, 1937 while she made her way around the world.

    Amelia Earhart mystery solved: she died on a Pacific island

    Awesome, they found out where she ended up crashing / spending the rest of her days.
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  • #2
    More Amelia Earhart Nonsense

    Posted on March 20, 2012 by Brian Dunning ,
    As I went into great detail in my Skeptoid episode about the fate of Amelia Earhart, she and navigator Fred Noonan disappeared in 1937 off Howland Island in the south Pacific when they ran out of fuel in the immediate vicinity of their destination. However, in today�s news, it is being widely reported that an expedition is underway to pursue new evidence via expensive underwater searches, that Earhart ended up instead as a castaway on distant Nikumaroro Island (then called Gardner Island). Money is indeed being spent on this expedition, apparently by the Discovery Channel, but that is where the fact ends. This alternate explanation for Earhart�s fate is almost certainly completely false, and exists only for the purpose of sensationalism at the expense of public intellect.

    This Amelia Earhart fancy is the product of Ric Gillespie, principal of TIGHAR (The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery), a man with whom I am pained to disagree, as I am a fellow aviation enthusiast and a nut for historic aircraft. Gillespie is most notable for being promoted on a series of television documentaries that present his alternate theory of Amelia Earhart�s fate as if it is new evidence, which it is not.
    Full story:
    More Amelia Earhart Nonsense | Skeptoid
    WARNING
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