**In an unparalleled revelation that could rewrite aviation history, deep-sea expedition pioneer, Deep Sea Vision, has announced the sensational discovery of what they believe to be Amelia Earhart’s long lost Lockheed Electra. The legendary aircraft vanished into the mist of the South Pacific during her infamous 1937 attempt to circumnavigate the globe. This breakthrough discovery promises to solve the enigmatic 84-year-old mystery that has captivated humanity and eluded historians for generations.**
Located off Papua New Guinea, where Earhart and her trusted navigator, Fred Noonan, were last seen alive on July 2nd, 1937, Deep Sea Vision utilized a state-of-the-art marine robotics technology to reveal what aberrations in their navigational calculations may have driven the legendary pilot off course and spiraling into the ocean. Tim Romeo, Deep Sea Vision CEO and a former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer, marks this discovery as the apex of his career, likening it to “a 10-year-old going on a treasure hunt.”
Unveiling their findings, Deep Sea Vision posted images of the wreckage on Sunday. One of the accompanying captions reading, “On July 2, 1937, Amelia Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan took off from Papua New Guinea, nearing the end of their record-setting journey around the world never to be seen again. Until today.” A bold statement that has electrified global interest and scrutiny.
Against the odds, and much like Earhart’s own indomitable spirit, the plane has endured against the ravages of time. Eyewitness Romeo attested that the aircraft appears to be in sound condition, given its near nine-decade subaquatic interment. His views align with Earhart’s renowned aeronautical prowess; she would have exerted maximum effort to make a controlled water landing, an hypothesis supported by the sonar images.
This ongoing expedition, involving considerable resources and logistical efforts, covered an expansive 5,200 miles of ocean over 90 days. Instrumental to the search was the HUGIN 6000, an autonomous underwater vehicle, able to yield comprehensive scan results enabling the team to inspect large oceanic areas efficiently.
This groundbreaking discovery has aroused the curiosity in the highest echelons of aviation history, with specialists from the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum examining the findings. Dorothy Cochrane, aeronautics curator at the esteemed museum, acknowledged the museum’s intrigue with Deep Sea Vision’s initial imagery and championed for further dedicated investigation to provide an unequivocal closure to this historical enigma.
**In a nation that thrives on legends, the phantom aircraft of Amelia Earhart has become a talisman of American audacity, courage and ongoing legacy. The discovery by Deep Sea Vision, if confirmed, ushers a turning point in the historiography of aviation, delivering long-awaited closure to an American tale that has inspired and baffled the world in equal measure for the better part of a century. It is a testament to the relentless pursuit of truth and the triumph of science, promising to yet illuminate more in the deeper realms of the unknown yet unexplored.**
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does that look to anyone else like it has swept wings? Maybe they broke when they hit the water