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A team trying to solve the mystery of Amelia Earhart's fate 75 years after she vanished over the Pacific Ocean has ended its expedition to a remote island without finding her plane, the group said.
On researchers set off on a $2.2 million expedition and travelled 2,897 kilometres by ship from Honolulu to Nikumaroro in the Republic of Kiribati to search for clues to her disappearance in 1937.
"We are returning from Nikumaroro with volumes of new sonar data and hours upon hours of high-definition video," The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery (TIGHAR) said in a statement on Monday.
TIGHAR did not immediately release details about what the sonar data or video might show, and it did not say that any plane wreckage it had sought has been recovered.
Earhart, along with navigator Fred Noonan, set out to circumnavigate the globe along an equatorial route.
Richard Gillespie, executive director of TIGHAR, has said he believed Earhart died a castaway in searing hot Nikumaroro, which is 644 kilometres south-east of the Howland Island destination that Earhart and Noonan had been aiming for when they disappeared.
Before radio contact was lost, Earhart had said from the air her plane was short on fuel.
Gillespie has said evidence found on Nikumaroro in previous expeditions included what appeared to be a bottle of 1930s anti-freckle cream, bits of clothing and human bone fragments, which have led some to believe Earhart and Noonan may have been marooned on the island.
Difficult search
TIGHAR said on its website researchers are on their way back to Honolulu after cutting short the expedition due to equipment malfunctions. They spent five days on site, but had planned to be there for 10 days.
Researchers had said they believed Earhart's Lockheed Electra plane could rest in waters off Nikumaroro, where they suspect she survived for weeks or months.
During the five days they spent searching, the crew of expedition ship Niku VII was challenged by the undersea environment, in the form of a craggy reef slope with vertical cliffs stretching down for between 34 metres and 76 metres, the group said on its website.
On July 19, the expedition's blog questioned whether an aircraft that sank 75 years ago could even be found. Not only is the area filled with nooks, crannies and caves, but it is possible the aircraft might have floated away, the group said.
TIGHAR president Pat Thrasher said the Niku VII expedition crew will arrive in Honolulu at the end of this month, at which point Mr Gillespie, who was on the expedition, will be available to answer questions.
Once the crew returns to land, the TIGHAR team will review and analyse the new material. The search for answers to Earhart's disappearance has been documented for a Discovery Channel television special.
Reuters
Topics: history, air-and-space, accidents, human-interest, kiribati, united-states
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