Summary

Marine robotics firm Deep Sea Vision confirmed that a sonar image initially believed to show Amelia Earhart’s missing plane was actually a natural rock formation.

The image, taken near Howland Island, sparked excitement earlier this year as it aligned with her 1937 flight path.

However, after 11 months of analysis, the company concluded it was not the wreckage of her Lockheed 10-E Electra.

Deep Sea Vision plans to continue its search for Earhart’s last known location despite the setback.

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    38 hours ago

    Deep Sea Vision’s Instagram page also featured a post this month of a branded T-shirt with the sonar image that states: “We find rocks.”

    The best part of this story, they got a good humor about it at least.

  • @WoodScientist
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    10 hours ago

    My God in Heaven. It WAS aliens all along. A UFO intercepted Earhart’s plane and turned it to stone with a space ray! Or, possibly, a wizard did it.

  • Flying Squid
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    2220 hours ago

    Ah, the dreaded “looks like,” which amateurs plague archaeologists with all the time and which regularly makes it into the media makes it into the media again.

    Heaven forbid we wait for confirmation. It looks like her plane!

    • @Stovetop
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      1820 hours ago

      But don’t worry, now that the correction is out, we’ll only have at least 15 years of people who saw those articles confidently declaring that Amelia Earheart’s plane was discovered (along with her remains).

    • @ikidd
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      317 hours ago

      You have to admit, that was a pretty damn close match for a sonar image.

      • Flying Squid
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        211 hours ago

        But that’s exactly why you wait for confirmation.

  • @CluckN
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    417 hours ago

    I’m wondering if the rock formation includes all the silverware that the coconut crabs used.