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Robert Ballard of Titanic fame now searching for Amelia Earhart wreckage

1:45
Famed scientist searching for Amelia Earhart wreckage
National Archives/HISTORY
ByKatie Kindelan
August 13, 2019, 12:03 PM

The world-renowned scientist who discovered the underwater wreckage of the Titanic now says a new clue may lead him to the spot where Amelia Earhart's plane went down more than 80 years ago.

Robert Ballard believes a photo taken in 1937 may hold the answer to where the American aviator's plane crashed as she tried to become the first female pilot to circumnavigate the globe.

Amelia Earhart in the cockpit of a plane.
National Archives/HISTORY

Intelligence analysts at the Pentagon who viewed the photo concluded the object in the photo resembles a Lockheed model 10-E Electra, the plane Earhart was last seen flying. Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, vanished in July 1937.

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The photo was taken just off the shores of Nikumaroro, a small island in the Pacific Ocean. The island is just 4.5 miles long and 1 mile wide.

Ballard, a National Geographic Explorer, is using his ship, the E/V Nautilus, to try to find the wreckage of Earhart's plane off the coast of Nikumaroro.

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(MORE: Documentary says Amelia Earhart may have survived crash landing in the Marshall Islands)

"It's not the Lock Ness Monster; it's not Big Foot," Ballard told National Geographic. "That plane exists, which means I'm gonna find it."

Amelia Earhart stands in front of the Lockheed Electra in which she disappeared in 1937.
Science & Society Picture Library/Getty Images,FILE

Just last year a study concluded that bones found on Nikumaroro in 1940 that were originally thought to belong to a man are now being considered as Earhart's. The study, "Amelia Earhart and the Nikumaroro Bones," was authored by Richard L. Jantz, a professor for University of Tennessee's Department of Anthropology, and was published in the journal "Forensic Anthropology."

ABC News and National Geographic are both owned by parent company Disney.

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