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Amelia Earhart New Clues Revealed
Articles found on remote island possibly belonged to Amelia Earhart (news.blogs.cnn.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
It seems like not a month goes without this TIGHAR group making some fantastic announcement about Amelia Earhart. Then of course you never hear any follow-up announcements when then their theory turns out to be nothing. All this based on a freckle cream jar? I think they make these premature announcements to raise money, which if you read their website seems to be what they are all about.
Just another in the long line of "fishy" stories from TIGHAR, in an effort to keep the cash coming in. At this point, the mystery is simply, "where is the plan?".
57 "credible" radio transmissions from Earheart's plane after safely landing on the beach of an uninhabited island? Okay, but by what means were they judged to be credible? If judged to be credible, were they answered? Pam Am Clipper flights on their big luxurious float planes had been criss crossing the Pacific region since 1936, watching for and reporting on Jap naval movements and island buildups. It's possible they heard Earheart's transmissions.
I would think that if the safe beach landing by Earheart was indeed a valid scenario she and/or Noonan would have been searching for a frequency with audible/intelligible transmissions and would have been talking on that one which could have been a Clipper flight. Whether their beached plane was washed out to sea right away by the tide or not, the radio could only have been used as long as there was gas in the tanks to run an engine and a generator to power the radio. There probably wasn't much of that left after they had wandered around lost finally landing just before the tanks ran dry. They may have circled insight of an island for a while using their altitude in hopes of raising someone on the radio.
As soon as the plane was swamped by the tide that would have ended use of the radio making it essential to make all those "credible transmissions" probably on that first fateful day of their arrival. Because news traveled slowly back then those transmissions would not necessarily have been "recognized" as calls from Earheart until well after the fact. I seem to recall radio operators in those days also used morse code for sending out messages? When you think about it how much difference would it have made if they had been able to carry on a radio conversation with someone if they had no earthly idea of their position or did Noonan, the navigator, have use of a sextant?
While most of this doesn't quite pass the smell test, the one part of the story that does pass the smell test is the search plane overflying the small island where Earheart and/or Noonan may have tried frantically to get the attention of the crew only to go unseen with the search plane continuing on course never to return. That of course assumes that Earheart and Noonan were there with enough strength to signal their presence. This like all unsolved mysteries involving people of renown will for a long time be the source of wild speculation like that still surrounding D.B. Cooper (aka Dan Cooper) and the only successful act of air piracy to date (1971) with his parachute jump from the air stairs of a NWA 727 in the dark of night in driving rain while dressed in street clothes.
I would think that if the safe beach landing by Earheart was indeed a valid scenario she and/or Noonan would have been searching for a frequency with audible/intelligible transmissions and would have been talking on that one which could have been a Clipper flight. Whether their beached plane was washed out to sea right away by the tide or not, the radio could only have been used as long as there was gas in the tanks to run an engine and a generator to power the radio. There probably wasn't much of that left after they had wandered around lost finally landing just before the tanks ran dry. They may have circled insight of an island for a while using their altitude in hopes of raising someone on the radio.
As soon as the plane was swamped by the tide that would have ended use of the radio making it essential to make all those "credible transmissions" probably on that first fateful day of their arrival. Because news traveled slowly back then those transmissions would not necessarily have been "recognized" as calls from Earheart until well after the fact. I seem to recall radio operators in those days also used morse code for sending out messages? When you think about it how much difference would it have made if they had been able to carry on a radio conversation with someone if they had no earthly idea of their position or did Noonan, the navigator, have use of a sextant?
While most of this doesn't quite pass the smell test, the one part of the story that does pass the smell test is the search plane overflying the small island where Earheart and/or Noonan may have tried frantically to get the attention of the crew only to go unseen with the search plane continuing on course never to return. That of course assumes that Earheart and Noonan were there with enough strength to signal their presence. This like all unsolved mysteries involving people of renown will for a long time be the source of wild speculation like that still surrounding D.B. Cooper (aka Dan Cooper) and the only successful act of air piracy to date (1971) with his parachute jump from the air stairs of a NWA 727 in the dark of night in driving rain while dressed in street clothes.
Hog wash.....
I wonder where these "57" transmissions have been hiding all these years; and just what information do they contain? Impossible to make any judgment until more is revealed. This is a "teaser" story designed to keep people "tuned-in" as the news channels do.
On Google Earth, I have contemplated where I would put down if forced to do so on Nikumaroro. The wind direction and tide are known (but not to me!) so one could determine the feasibility of a beach landing and where. I have also considered the possibility of a water-landing in the lagoon with a run-up onto shore at the last moment. Possible but not probable as this technique was not well known then.
At tide level, all steel and aluminum will be gone but there maybe some brass/bronze and stainless steel remnants that super-duper metal detectors might uncover. With that find, maybe some rubber remnants that could be identified also.
On Google Earth, I have contemplated where I would put down if forced to do so on Nikumaroro. The wind direction and tide are known (but not to me!) so one could determine the feasibility of a beach landing and where. I have also considered the possibility of a water-landing in the lagoon with a run-up onto shore at the last moment. Possible but not probable as this technique was not well known then.
At tide level, all steel and aluminum will be gone but there maybe some brass/bronze and stainless steel remnants that super-duper metal detectors might uncover. With that find, maybe some rubber remnants that could be identified also.
If the plane was standing on its wheels, this will suggest that it landed on some smooth surface. And not near some reef, over which it suddenly vanished. Was there a tsunami ?