The explorer who found the Titanic is off to find Amelia Earhart's plane

Robert Ballard is the oceanic detective who turned up the Titanic in 1985, the lost Nazi ship Bismarck, and many other shipwrecks. Now he's off to to find Amelia Earhart's plane that hasn't been seen since she and her navigator disappeared over the Pacific ocean on July 2, 1937 during their flight around the world. And based on a photo taken just a few months after Earhart disappeared, Ballard is pretty sure he knows where the plane crashed. From the New York Times:


Kurt M. Campbell, who served as assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs in the Obama administration, invited Dr. Ballard to a meeting. The two had known each other since their days in Naval intelligence.


Mr. Campbell ushered him into his office, Dr. Ballard recalled in a recent interview: "He closed the door, and he said, 'I want to show you a picture.'"


First, he offered Dr. Ballard a grainy black-and-white photo. "He said, 'What do you see?' I said, 'I see an island with a ship on a reef?' And he said, 'No, look over to the left.'"


As Dr. Ballard squinted at the blur, Mr. Campbell handed him a second, digitally enhanced image. Mr. Campbell said the smudge was landing gear from a Lockheed Model 10-E Electra. And the reef in the picture was part of tiny Nikumaroro Island, in the mostly uninhabited Phoenix Islands.


There it was, a precise place to look for Earhart's plane.


"I went, 'I'll be damned,'" he said. "'That really narrows the search, doesn't it?'"


"Finding Amelia Earhart's Plane Seemed Impossible. Then Came a Startling Clue." by Julie Cohn (New York Times)



image: Harris & Ewing (Public Domain)