Tuesday 24 July 2012

And the Birthday of the Day goes to:


Today’s Birthday of the day (chosen by picking the first name I recognized) goes to this lovely lady.



Don’t know who she is?
Shame on you and your cat.

It’s Amelia Earhart, you know, the lady pilot what went missing that time?

Amelia was a pretty accomplished person. She started flying early  and ended up being the first person of the female persuasion to fly solo across the Atlantic and the first to successfully fly from Honolulu to Oakland (apparently this flight went so well she listened to the opera once she was in range of the radio).

She made 2 attempts at flying around the world; the first did not go well. The plane decided that It wanted to stay home and made this known my breaking down.

Attempt number 2  went somewhat better. Earhart and her managed to get through 35000km of their 46000km journey. The last 11000km was all going to be over the pacific (which as we know from every movie we have ever watched, does not bode well).

Earhart and Co-pilot Fred Noonan departed from Lae on July 2 1937 heading for a tiny weensy little Island known as Howland. They never got there.

Exactly what happed we will never know, but it is thought that problems with radio navigation were the cause of everything going wrong.

One hour after Earhart’s last message the search for the missing plane and pilots began. The official search lasted for 17 days and in that time no sign of the plane or its occupants was seen.

There are so many theories floating around as to what happened to Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan. One is the known as the Crash and Sink theory, the name pretty much speaks for itself. The plane ran out of fuel, crashed and sunk to the bottom of the ocean, where it still lies yet unfound.

Another is that they somehow managed to land on Gardner Island. There is… or was some physical evidence to support this theory, the most notable of which is a skeleton found in 1940, possibly belonging to a tallish woman of European decent. The bones were lost and haven’t been seen since. Other evidence found on the Island includes pieces of aluminium which could conceivably come from the type of plane Earhart was flying at the time, a piece of plexiglass which also fits the window of the type of plane and a shoe dating from the 30s, similar to the style that Amelia Earhart wore. In 2007 more bone fragments were found, but testing in 2010 was inconclusive as to whether or not they were human.

The other theories are somewhat more romantic. They were spies, thy wr captured and executed in Saipan, she turned back mid-light and ended up in New Britain, the somehow survived and Earhart ended up in New Jersey living under an assumed name. The lady whose name the theorists chose sued them by the way and was clearly not Amelia Earhart.

The list goes on.

Happy 115th Birthday Amelia, wherever you may be.

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