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Default Lost at Sea or marooned on an island? Search for Amelia Earhart revived

On Fri, 13 Jul 2007 08:48:13 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote:

Interesting details about one of the longest running search efforts
for somebody lost at sea


I thought they had already extabished where she crashed?
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Default Lost at Sea or marooned on an island? Search for Amelia Earhart revived

On Jul 13, 3:39?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2007 08:48:13 -0700, Chuck Gould

wrote:
Interesting details about one of the longest running search efforts
for somebody lost at sea


I thought they had already extabished where she crashed?


It's my impression that there are conflicting plausible theories.

I think the idea of tossing out pig bones to see just where the 2 1/2
foot (!) crabs drag them off to is pretty ingenious. The crabs may
have traditional eating areas that don't change much from decade to
decade, and that would be good place to start looking for DNA. If
Earhart and Noonan perished on a island covered with 2 1/2 foot crabs
they would be intimately involved in a "crab feed" shortly after
demise.

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Default Lost at Sea or marooned on an island? Search for Amelia Earhartrevived

Chuck Gould wrote:
On Jul 13, 3:39?pm, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jul 2007 08:48:13 -0700, Chuck Gould

wrote:
Interesting details about one of the longest running search efforts
for somebody lost at sea

I thought they had already extabished where she crashed?


It's my impression that there are conflicting plausible theories.

I think the idea of tossing out pig bones to see just where the 2 1/2
foot (!) crabs drag them off to is pretty ingenious. The crabs may
have traditional eating areas that don't change much from decade to
decade, and that would be good place to start looking for DNA. If
Earhart and Noonan perished on a island covered with 2 1/2 foot crabs
they would be intimately involved in a "crab feed" shortly after
demise.



Are they still finding her luggage everywhere?
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