News

Does a photo held by the National Archives show that Amelia Earhart survived a crash landing 80 years ago? The photo is featured in an upcoming History Channel documentary. What happened to Amelia ...
Sonar images could reveal the location of Earhart's fatal crash, but some experts say the ... team believes they've found iconic pilot Amelia Earhart's plane in the heart of the Pacific Ocean.
The aviator’s publicity-mad husband, George Palmer Putnam, kept pushing her to risk her life for the sake of fame.
Amelia Earhart made her final airborne radio ... as bogus and have been largely ignored ever since." He believes Earhart crashed on Gardner Island, approximately 350 nautical miles from her ...
For 89 days, Tony Romeo and his team had nothing to show for their three-month expedition to find Amelia Earhart's missing plane. On day 90, they may have made the discovery of a lifetime.
The search for Amelia Earhart's missing airplane continues nearly a century after her death. Back in January, South Carolina-based imaging company Deep Sea Vision shared an exciting update that ...
Amelia Earhart disappeared 86 years ago ... Another theory says that Earhart crash-landed on the Marshall Islands and was taken captive by the Japanese, where she eventually died.
From the daily newsletter: the aviator’s journey to the Pacific. Plus: Bill McKibben on FEMA’s lack of preparedness; and how ...
There’s a new lead in the almost nine-decade search for Amelia Earhart ... why the plane crashed into the ocean — but it would dispel Gillespie’s theory that Earhart and Noonan landed ...
Dozens, if not hundreds, of questions come to mind at the mention of Amelia Earhart’s name. What happened to her plane? What caused the crash? Did Earhart and her navigator escape? Was she just ...
For a moment, it seemed the mystery of Amelia Earhart’s disappearance had been ... appeared to confirm one of the more popular theories, that she crashed after running out of fuel searching ...
Amelia Earhart's great-nephew said sonar images of a crashed plane suspected of belonging to the vanished aviator is the 'most promising lead' yet in the decades-long search. Bram Kleppner said ...