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Amelia Earhart's Disappearance
Underwood & Underwood, 1937 / Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery — public domain
Pacific Ocean (Howland Island vicinity) · United States
Disappearance

Amelia Earhart's Disappearance

Pioneering aviator Amelia Earhart vanished with navigator Fred Noonan over the central Pacific in 1937 while attempting to reach tiny Howland Island during a round-the-world flight — a disappearance that triggered one of the largest air-and-sea searches of its era and has never been conclusively solved.

Field Guide Entry

Origin Story

On July 2, 1937, Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan departed Lae, New Guinea, aiming for Howland Island, a speck of US territory roughly 2,556 miles away and their refueling stop on a round-the-world flight. Her final radio transmissions indicated she believed she was near the island but could not see it or get a usable radio bearing; she reported having about half an hour of fuel left shortly before contact was lost entirely.

Evidence & Claims

The U.S. Navy and Coast Guard mounted one of the largest air-and-sea searches conducted to that point, covering hundreds of thousands of square miles around Howland Island, and found no trace of the aircraft. Decades later, the research group TIGHAR proposed that Earhart and Noonan missed Howland, diverted to nearby Gardner Island (now Nikumaroro), and survived briefly as castaways before a British survey expedition arrived in October 1937 — a theory supported by some recovered artifacts and radio-bearing analysis, but never confirmed by physical remains positively identified as Earhart's or Noonan's.

Skeptical Explanations

The U.S. Navy's official conclusion remains "crash and sink": that the Electra ran out of fuel and went down at sea somewhere near its intended course to Howland. Mainstream historians treat the Nikumaroro theory as a plausible but unproven alternative rather than an established fact, and no aircraft wreckage matching Earhart's Lockheed Electra has ever been definitively located at either site despite numerous funded search expeditions.

Approximate Area

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The marker represents a general area, not an exact site.

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