The wreckage of the plane from which legendary aviator Amelia Earhart disappeared without a trace in 1937 was found at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean yesterday. People are reporting this.
Deep Sea Vision said it discovered the wreckage of the Lockheed 10-E Electra, which required searching 5,200 square miles (13,467 square kilometers) of ocean floor. Note ed.). The head of the operation, Tony Romeo, is confident that the crew’s wreckage belongs to the Earhart plane. The evidence included that the tail design was identical to the aircraft in which Amelia flew and that “there were no other known aircraft crashes in the area, especially not at that time.”
In addition to removing debris from the bottom, Deep Sea Vision plans to find other evidence. “I think the Americans will want to see the plane at the Smithsonian Institution, that’s where it belongs. It’s not at the bottom of the ocean,” said Tony Romeo.
Remember that Amelia Earhart was the first female pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic. In 1937 she planned a trip around the world, in which she had to fly 47,000 km. They planned to fly as close to the equator as possible, but disappeared without a trace. Not a single search expedition could determine the exact date and cause of death and accident.
Source: People Talk
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