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Amelia Earhart: Why the mystery continues

Today's Google Doodle honors Amelia Earhart even as the latest $2.2 million search for her plane runs afoul of a Pacific Island reef. The famous aviatrix would have been 115 today.

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Google
Google honors Amelia Earhart with a doodle on her birthday. The aviatrix would be 115 years old today.
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Reuters
Famed aviatrix Amelia Earhart is pictured with her Lockheed Electra10E before her ill fated quest to fly around the world in 1937. Seventy-five years after Amelia Earhart disappeared over the Pacific, researchers have called off the latest search for wreckage of her plane.

Today Google celebrates the 115th birthday of聽aviatrix Amelia Earhart 鈥 and one of the great unsolved 20th-century mysteries.聽

Sorry, Amelia, no birthday present this year. But it's not been for a lack of trying.

Throughout the years there have been a number of search attempts聽to find Earhart or wreckage of her plane. Now 75 years after she vanished in her Lockheed Model 10 Electra over the Pacific Ocean, the most recent hope of finding evidence of Earhart's plane is fading. 聽

Discovery News reported last week that a $2.2 million expedition by The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR)

You remember, a couple of months ago, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton held a press conference, and gave an boost to the credibility to the TIGHAR hunt for Earhart's plane.

TIGHAR researchers believed that when Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan went missing July 2, 1937, they made an emergency landing on a reef near the uninhabited island Nikumaroro.

鈥淓verything has pointed to the airplane having gone over the edge of that reef in a particular spot and the wreckage ought to be right down there,鈥 Rick Gillespie, the founder and executive director of TIGHAR, told The Associated Press in early July. There were reports of a 1937 British photo that showed the wreckage of the plane in the background.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to search where it 鈥榮hould be,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淎nd maybe it鈥檚 there, maybe it鈥檚 not. And there鈥檚 no way to know unless you go and look.鈥

But last week, TIGHAR called off the expedition because of the difficulty of searching the reef.聽 The slope of the reef was quite steep, and it was filled with nooks, crannies, caves, and crevices. One researcher at TIGHAR questioned the feasibility of the search.

In addition, two "targets" 鈥 which they thought could have been part of the wreckage of Earhart's plane 鈥 turned out to be a large coral boulder and a piece of the keel from The Norwich City, a well-known ship wreck.

鈥淕iven what we now know about this place, is it reasonable to think that an airplane which sank here 75 years ago is findable?鈥 asked Patricia Thrasher, TIGHAR鈥檚 president, in an interview with Discovery News. 鈥淚t would be easy to go over and over and over the same territory for weeks and still not really cover it all." And added Thrasher: "The aircraft could have floated away, as well.鈥

The TIGHAR search, funded in part by Discovery Channel and FedEx, began on July 3, and was scheduled to last about 26 days. Since 1989, TIGHAR has conducted 10 expeditions near Nikumaroro Island, which is part of the Pacific nation of Kiribati.

TIGHAR researchers say that significant finds on Nikumaroro lead them to continue to believe Earhart and Noonan may have survived as castaways there for some time. They found a zipper from the 1930s, a cosmetic bottle 鈥 possibly for anti-freckle cream 鈥 and human bone fragments.

Other researchers who have been involved in searching for clues to Earhart鈥檚 disappearance say TIGHAR has been looking in the wrong place. Earhart, who was attempting to become the first woman to circumnavigate the globe, had planned to stop and refuel on Howland Island. Some say she wouldn鈥檛 have had enough fuel to make it to Nikumaroro, which is about 400 miles southeast of Howland Island.

They also point to Earhart鈥檚 last radio transmission; it is thought that when Earhart made her last radio call she was within 75 miles of Howland Island, though the surrounding area has been comprehensively searched.

TIGHAR points to other radio signals they say came from Nikumaroro; radio signals that at the time were dismissed as a hoax and then forgotten.

鈥淩adio distress calls believed to have been sent from the missing plane dominated the headlines and drove much of the US Coast Guard and Navy search,鈥 Gillespie told Discovery News. 鈥淲hen the search failed, all of the reported post-loss radio signals were categorically dismissed as bogus and have been largely ignored ever since.鈥

Other artifacts found throughout the years point to long-term habitation on the island. Broken pieces of glass could have been used as cutting or scraping tools, and large numbers of fish and bird bones near ash and charcoal deposits suggest someone was surviving on the island.

Researchers also found a pocket knife, part of a man鈥檚 shoe, and part of a woman鈥檚 shoe, all thought to be clues to Earhart鈥檚 disappearance.

Other rumors have included聽a theory that Earhart was really a spy for the US, and was captured by the Japanese.

Baring hard evidence, for now it seems,聽Earhart's聽disappearance聽will remain as mysterious as ever.

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