Description
On July 5th 2020, we walked away from the Amelia Earhart case as a team. After over a year of recording and almost two years in production, we ended what I thought was the final conversation we’d have on this show regarding Amelia Earhart.
Well, you know how that goes…..
2 weeks ago, on January 26th, a very intriguing sonar image of what appears to be an aircraft 16,000 feet below the surface of the Pacific was revealed by Tony Romeo and Deep Sea Vision - a team that had been searching in that area for any remnants they could find of the holy grail of aviation. Sometimes, when you’re searching for a needle in the biggest haystack on the face of the earth, you produce a miracle.
Tonight, for one night only, we return to our audience and re-open the case that we left over 4 years ago.
Suddenly, it’s the summer of 2019 again. And Jen Taylor hasn't missed a step.
This is a line I never thought I’d say again. Welcome back to Vanished. This is Amelia Earhart & Fred Noonan.
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Opening Audio News Clip
SHOW NOTES & FURTHER READING
Is This Amelia Earhart’s Long-Lost Plane? @ The Wall Street Journal
Liz Smith’s Dateline Theory Blog
Tantalizing Theories About the Earhart Disappearance @ History
It’s December 5th, 1872. The waters of the Atlantic are cold and desolate. Unforgiving.
A British brigantine, the Dei Gratia sits about 400 miles east of the Azores when crew members spot a ship that seems to just be bobbing on the endless waves - lifeless in an ocean that seems to never end. ...
Published 11/27/23
It’s January 5th 1941, the skies are gray and filled with water, ready at any minute to pour down to the Earth below. Amy Johnson, whom many people referred to as the British Amelia Earhart, is soaring through the air, her eyes fixed on the horizon, her heart beating with excitement and...
Published 05/21/23