NEW
YORK (AP) — Bones found in 1940 on a western Pacific Ocean island were
quite likely to be remains from famed aviator Amelia Earhart, a new
analysis concludes.
The
study and other evidence "point toward her rather strongly," University
of Tennessee anthropologist Richard Jantz said Thursday.
Earhart
disappeared during an attempted flight around the world in 1937, and
the search for an answer to what happened to her and her navigator has
captivated the public for decades.
Jantz's
analysis is the latest chapter in a back-and-forth that has played out
about the remains, which were found in 1940 on Nikumaroro Island but are
now lost.
All
that survive are seven measurements, from the skull and bones of the
arm and leg. Those measurements led a scientist in 1941 to conclude the
bones belong to a man. In 1998, however, Jantz and another scientist
reinterpreted them as coming from a woman of European ancestry, and
about Earhart's height. But in 2015, still other researchers concluded
the original assessment as a man was correct.
Source: Yahoo
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