Earhart disappeared in 1937 and the wreckage was never found.
The location of Amelia Earhart and its location of Crash was finally located?
Earhart was an aviation icon in the 1930s and became the first aviator woman to go solo across the United States in 1932.
However, its history encountered a tragic and mysterious end when it apparently disappeared in the air by flying on July 2, 1937.
It has never been revised and the wreck has never been found. It is one of the greatest unresolved mysteries in the history of America. Historians and detectives have been debated for decades where its last resting place could be.
Now a man thinks he has understood.
Amelia Earhart was a famous pilot who disappeared without clear explanation in 1937. (Photo by Keystone-France / Gamma-Heystone via Getty Images)
Justin Myers, a pilot colleague, thinks he has located the Earhart crash site using Google Maps, according to popular mechanics.
Nikumaroro Island – Part of the Phoenix Islands, Kiribati in the Pacific Ocean in northeast Australia.
You can see the exact location of the island in the photo below.
Did Amelia Earhart crushed on the island of Nikumaroro? (Credit: Google Maps)
Nikumaroro island has long been a popular theory for the location of the Earhart crash and its browser Fred Noonan.
“I was just putting myself in the shoes of Amelia and Fred … where I would have forced a light twin plane in their position, lost and low on fuel,” explained Myers at the exit. He believes he has found the answer on Google Maps when locating something that doesn’t look correct.
“The main thing is … of my interests of a child in vintage plane survey and an air crash, I can say that this is what was a vintage plane of 12 meters and 2 engines. What I cannot say is definitely Electra of Amelia (the plane she was flying),” explained Myer at the exit.
Did Amelia Earhart crushed on the island of Nikumaroro? (Photo credit must read staff / AFP via Getty Images)
He previously wrote the following in a blog article:
“I used the measurement tool on Google Earth and to my surprise and a small sweet thrill, it was around 39 feet. Last year, you could move to the subject and it was absolutely clear for me, it was an artificial object, not naturally corals. A practical person, I thought that it was a beautiful plane. Which seemed to be a perfect radial engine half exposed, was clearly. A growth around the diameter and on the spinner in the middle, probably the engine because the engine is made up of metals on the wheel and is perfect and is completely lost for years.
You can see several photos of the presumed crash site and remain at this link.
Where has Amelia Earhart crashed? (Credit: Getty Images)
The reality is that the mystery of what happened to Earhart remains completely unknown and will probably remain so until each advance can be properly studied.
There are far too many theories to even debate them all. Some people believe that time could have played a role (not very clear and not proven), some believe that the Japanese captured it (a photo that some thought supported that this suggestion was demystified years ago) and there is also the chance that the plane suffered a kind of problem.
No one knows, and that is why, almost 90 years later, it is always an incredibly captivating subject. Is Myers correct with his theory?
What happened to Amelia Earhart? (Photo of New York Times Co./getty Images)
Time will tell us. For the moment, everything remains unknown and unknown. What did you think happened to Amelia Earhart? Let me know David.hookstead@outkick.com.
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