See here for
essential background: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2024/01/amelia-earhart-plane-found.html.
Deep Sea Vision have returned to the location with better searching equipment, along with a ROV, a remotely operated vehicle, that dived down to the place where the strange object was seen. It built up a more detailed picture of the anomaly and unfortunately it turned out to be a pile of stones. The plane must be down there somewhere, but where? As I said previously, Amelia's low fuel status and the fact that the coastguard found no debris or bodies suggests that she carried out a controlled landing on the ocean surface. There was a life raft on board, but clearly she either failed to escape with it before the plane sank or she and Fred Noonan deployed the life raft, but that also sank before help could arrive. Source: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/researchers-thought-they-found-amelia-earharts-missing-plane-it-turned-out-to-be-a-plane-shaped-pile-of-rocks-180985603/. This is disappointing, but the search will go on. What this saga reveals is the incredible difficulty of finding things on the seabed. It is worse than finding the proverbial needle in a proverbial haystack. One problem related to MH370 is, how could we know if the plane is simply not there? It has taken eighty-eight years of fruitless searching and we still cannot find Amelia's Lookheed Electra; and we have a better idea of where that crashed than we do Malaysia Airlines' Boeing 777, if the Inmarsat method is correct. How much of theIndian
Ocean abyss do we need to comb until we can prove the negative,
that MH370's wreck is not laying there? The answer is probably never. Every
failure just means we have to look a few miles further from the 7th arc or scan
the places we already have one more time. This also means that people who
dispute that the lost airliner is in that region, like me, cannot demonstrate
our case just by waiting for Ocean Infinity to give up.
See here for more background: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2024/05/mh370-portal.html.
Deep Sea Vision have returned to the location with better searching equipment, along with a ROV, a remotely operated vehicle, that dived down to the place where the strange object was seen. It built up a more detailed picture of the anomaly and unfortunately it turned out to be a pile of stones. The plane must be down there somewhere, but where? As I said previously, Amelia's low fuel status and the fact that the coastguard found no debris or bodies suggests that she carried out a controlled landing on the ocean surface. There was a life raft on board, but clearly she either failed to escape with it before the plane sank or she and Fred Noonan deployed the life raft, but that also sank before help could arrive. Source: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/researchers-thought-they-found-amelia-earharts-missing-plane-it-turned-out-to-be-a-plane-shaped-pile-of-rocks-180985603/. This is disappointing, but the search will go on. What this saga reveals is the incredible difficulty of finding things on the seabed. It is worse than finding the proverbial needle in a proverbial haystack. One problem related to MH370 is, how could we know if the plane is simply not there? It has taken eighty-eight years of fruitless searching and we still cannot find Amelia's Lookheed Electra; and we have a better idea of where that crashed than we do Malaysia Airlines' Boeing 777, if the Inmarsat method is correct. How much of the
See here for more background: https://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2024/05/mh370-portal.html.
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