Scientific
Expedition to Locate Amelia Earhart with ARGUS
Media
entrepreneur Mike Kammerer has announced that his 'In Search of Amelia
Earhart, LLC', will be sending a state-of-the-art underwater autonomous
vehicle into the equatorial Pacific Ocean to find the world's most
famous lost airplane: Amelia Earhart's Lockheed
Electra 10E. Air Sports International - April 2001
Amelia Earhart's fame rivaled that of Charles Lindbergh in the Depression
decade before World War II. Thousands cheered the revered female aviator
when she landed at airports around the world. Her disappearance over
the Pacific near tiny Howland Island in 1937 - while attempting to
become the first pilot to fly around the world at the equator - was
the lead story in newspapers the world over for more than a week.
No trace of the plane, pilot or navigator has ever been found.
The
mystery of Earhart's disappearance has generated endless speculation
and countless theories (including one that she was captured by the
Japanese and forced to make World War II propaganda broadcasts as
Tokyo Rose). But this new expedition, armed with 25 years of rigorous
research and a number of independent scientific studies, is convinced
that the simplest and most logical explanation is correct: Earhart
and navigator Fred Noonan died after their plane ran out of fuel and
ditched in the Pacific near Howland Island, just north of the equator.
The
multi-million-dollar scientific expedition will search the seafloor
under 17,000 feet of water off Howland Island with the autonomous
underwater vehicle ARGUSTM (named after the all-seeing god of Greek
mythology). The only underwater system in the world capable of conducting
both sonar surveys and immediate photographic identification at these
depths, ARGUS is the product of over two decades of underwater robotics
research.
This expedition, along with a number of other deep-water search teams
hoping to locate the downed aircraft, have identified the location
of the plane within a manageable search area near Howland Island.
If found, the twin-engine plane is likely to be in excellent condition
due to the low
temperatures and lack of sunlight and oxygen more than three miles
beneath the ocean surface.
After
being shrouded in conjecture, disinformation and folklore for almost
65 years, the final chapter in the mystery of Amelia Earhart's disappearance
may soon be written.
Amelia
Earhart, the greatest American heroine of the twentieth century, may
be coming home