Photo Suggests Amelia Earhart Survived Crash

Reade Kirby | July 6, 2017
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A picture has recently surfaced may explain what happened to Amelia Earhart, the first female aviator to fly across the Atlantic Ocean. According to legend, Earhart mysteriously disappeared during a flight from Papua New Guinea to Howland Island in 1937.

Fox News reports that on July 9, a two-hour documentary titled, “Amelia Earhart: The Lost Evidence” will air on the History Channel that claims, according to a theory, Earhart survived the crash.

Investigators from the History Channel documentary believe Earhart survived her crash, landing in the Marshall Islands, where she was subsequently captured by the Japanese Military. They also believe that she was on a spying mission issued by the U.S. government and died in Japanese custody on the island of Saipan.

In the documentary, a recently discovered photograph that shows Earhart, her navigator, and her plane, are used as evidence for the theory. The photo was discovered in the U.S. National Archives by Les Kinney, a former U.S. Treasury Agent.

He said, “The photograph came out of a Navy file, a formerly top secret file in the National Archives.”

“It was misfiled and that was the only reason I found it,” he continued.

The photo is a picture of a group of people on a Marshall Islands dock. In the photo, you can see reportedly Earhart with her back to the camera and Fred Noonan, her navigator, all the way to the left. The picture also supposedly includes Earhart’s plane, which is located to the far right, and was tested with recognition and proportional comparison technology

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