CHARLOTTE, N.C. ( QUEEN CITY NEWS) — It’s a mystery—87 years in the making.
A South Carolina adventurer's Amelia Earhart discovery turned out to be a plane-shaped rock formation, not her long-lost ...
Surely, the grainy image had to be Amelia Earhart's long-lost plane, 16,000 feet beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean.
New solar images from the company’s underwater drone revealed an aircraft-shaped rock formation, not Earhart's plane.
Hopes of finding the long lost plane of pilot Amelia Earhart were dashed Wednesday when they company that claimed it found a ...
An 87-year-old quest to find Amelia Earhart's missing plane looked like it had finally come to an end earlier this year. Following an extensive expedition, explorers at South Carolina firm Deep Sea ...
However, analysis found the panel did not belong to Earhart's Lockheed Electra but instead was part of a plane that crashed during World War Two at least six years later. Theory One: Amelia ...
The South Carolina-based deep-sea explorer who stumbled upon what he believed to be Amelia Earhart ... neither Earhart’s remains nor the wreckage of her plane have ever been located.
A deep sea exploration company claims they may have spotted the remains of the plane of Amelia Earhart, the American aviation pioneer who disappeared over the Pacific Ocean in 1937. Deep Sea ...
What happened to Amelia Earhart and her long-lost airplane? It’s one of the world’s biggest mysteries – and it’s going to ...