3 min read
24 Feb
24Feb

I recently came across this video and really enjoyed watching it and listening to the theory behind one of the mysterious 1937 radio signals. I’m not entirely convinced by the conclusion myself, but I still thought it was interesting — and worth sharing for anyone who follows the ongoing aviation mystery surrounding Amelia Earhart

.On 2 July 1937, during her round-the-world flight, Earhart radioed that she was “low on fuel” and flying along a navigation line — and then the world heard nothing more. She and her navigator, Fred Noonan, vanished somewhere over the Pacific near Howland Island, triggering the largest air–sea search ever attempted at the time. Despite scanning 310,000 square miles, no confirmed wreckage was recovered.

Most historians believe the pair ran out of fuel and crashed into the sea.

But a handful of post-loss radio signals, along with disputed coordinates and unexplained artifacts found on remote Pacific islands, continue to fuel the possibility that Earhart may have survived the initial landing — at least for a short time.

Whether you agree with the theory or not, the video revisits an angle that shines new light on what might have been missed, miscalculated, or never fully pieced together in the decades since her disappearance. 

WATCH THE VIDEO

Michael Thomas

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