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Amelia Earhart in front of the Lockheed-Electra monoplane and a sonar image of what researchers believe may be the wreckage of her ill-fated flight.
Amelia Earhart in front of the Lockheed-Electra monoplane and a sonar image of what researchers believe may be the wreckage of her ill-fated flight.
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Amelia Earhart's plane rising into the air after a 4,000-foot run at the start of the flight from Oakland, California, on March 17, 1937.
Amelia Earhart 's plane taking off from Oakland, California, on March 17, 1937.
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A former US intelligence officer believes he may have found the wreckage of Amelia Earhart's plane. His team used a $9 million submersible that picked up a sonar image during a 100-day expedition.

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Amelia Earhart seated atop the cockpit of the twin-motored, all-metal, Lockheed-Elecktra monoplane, is pictured adjacent to a sonar image of what researchers believe may be the wreckage of her ill-fated flight.
Amelia Earhart seated atop the cockpit of the twin-motored, all-metal, Lockheed-Elecktra monoplane, is pictured adjacent to a sonar image of what researchers believe may be the wreckage of her ill-fated flight.