Aidan-G
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A new search for the wreckage of Amelia Earhart's plane will launch in
2014, according to an organization that has already launched several
expeditions to the Pacific island of Nikumaroro.
Earhart,
a famed aviator, vanished in 1937 along with her navigator Fred Noonan.
The two were attempting a flight around the world, and were last seen
in Lae, New Guinea. Ever since, theories have circulated that Earhart
and Noonan did not die in a crash, but survived for at least a little
while after an emergency landing on an uninhabited island.
The castaway theory has focused on Nikumaroro, once known as Gardner
Island. According to The International Group For Historic Aircraft
Recovery (TIGHAR), Earhart and Noonan may have survived for days or
weeks after landing on the reef surrounding the island. Among the
evidence were post-crash distress calls thought to have been sent by the stranded aviators. [The 9 Craziest Ocean Voyages]
If TIGHAR's researchers are right, Earhart's Electra (a modified
Lockheed Model 10E aircraft) would have been washed from the shallow
reefs down a plunging cliff off the coast of Nikumaroro. Previous sonar explorations
of the area have turned up bumps and strange shapes on the Cliffside —
part of an underwater mountain of which Nikumaroro is the peak. Now,
TIGHAR plans to use submarines to explore an object captured
photographically in 1937 by British Colonial Service officer Eric
Bevingtona during a British colonial expedition.
The Bevington Object, as it is known, was noticed in 2010. It's a tiny
speck in a wallet-sized black-and-white photo, but TIGHAR researchers
believe it may show the wreckage of the landing gear of Earhart's plane
before it was washed down from the reef.
Using the Hawaiian Undersea Research Laboratory's manned submersibles
Pisces IV and Pisces V, the TIGHAR explorers plan to search a mile-wide
swath of ocean down to a depth of 3,280 feet (1,000 meters). They also
plan to search the nearby shore for evidence of an initial campsite
where Earhart and Noonan might have survived.
TIGHAR estimates the 30-day expedition aboard the University of Hawaii
oceanographic research ship Ka'Imikai-O-Kanaloa could cost $3 million,
and they are looking for sponsorships and donations from the public to
fund the trip.