In the uninhabited island of Nikumaroro some interesting objects were discovered, could the mystery surrounding the disappearance of the pioneering pilot Amelia Earhart end.
Nikumaroro in Iceland, a small fragment of bone with a knife, bottles were discovered by American Production and women.
The discovery, if you consider that Earhart and her family, the myth that the famous pilot died at sea at the age of 41 years to dissipate. Want to show that Amelia Earhart lived as a castaway on the island.
Levels Earhart in 1937 while trying to fly around the world. She was last heard on his way to the South Pacific. Both Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan were never seen again.
"After 22 years of rigorous research and ten grueling expeditions, we can say that evidence of all that we have found in Nikumaroro compatible with the hypothesis that Earhart and Fred Noonan landed his browser, and died as a castaway, " said Ric Gillespie, Managing Director of the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery. "Whether it yields phalanx bones of the human DNA, there is a preponderance of evidence sufficient to continue our research with hope and determination."
The bone fragment was examined in the Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, University of Oklahoma.
Nikumaroro in Iceland, a small fragment of bone with a knife, bottles were discovered by American Production and women.
The discovery, if you consider that Earhart and her family, the myth that the famous pilot died at sea at the age of 41 years to dissipate. Want to show that Amelia Earhart lived as a castaway on the island.
Levels Earhart in 1937 while trying to fly around the world. She was last heard on his way to the South Pacific. Both Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan were never seen again.
"After 22 years of rigorous research and ten grueling expeditions, we can say that evidence of all that we have found in Nikumaroro compatible with the hypothesis that Earhart and Fred Noonan landed his browser, and died as a castaway, " said Ric Gillespie, Managing Director of the International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery. "Whether it yields phalanx bones of the human DNA, there is a preponderance of evidence sufficient to continue our research with hope and determination."
The bone fragment was examined in the Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, University of Oklahoma.
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