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Earhart Project Research Bulletin #83 |
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The Jaluit Photo: What's Wrong With This Picture? | |
The more we learn about this photo, the worse it gets. The whole premise behind the “discovery” of this picture is that it was misfiled. Is that true? In an interview with the Associated Press , Mr. Les Kinney said that he found the undated photo in a batch of documents collected by U.S. sources in anticipation of the 1944 invasion of the Marshall Islands. The National Archives has verified that the image is from a file “unrelated to Earhart.” To be specific, it is from “Records of the Office of Naval Intelligence, Record Group 36, Monograph Files Relating to the Pacific Ocean Area, NAID 68141661.” The caption at the bottom says it’s a photo of Jaluit Harbor. Jaluit was the headquarters for the Japanese in the Marshall islands. The photo was exactly where it should be, among documents collected by U.S. sources in anticipation of the 1944 invasion of the Marshall Islands. But when Kinney saw what, in his mind, were Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan he decided that the photo must have been misfiled. “This was a mistake. This was never meant to be there,” he said. The National Archives apparently disagrees. The photo is still right where it was. The ship in the background is alleged to be the Japanese survey ship Koshu towing a barge carrying Earhart’s Lockheed Electra - but the ship is smaller than the Koshu and whatever is behind it is just an indistinct blob. There is no reason to think the photo was misfiled, so everything hinges upon whether Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan accidentally happen to be in this picture of Jaluit Harbor. It is possible to construct tortured explanations for why there are no soldiers guarding the prisoners, why Earhart’s and Noonan’s clothes are wrong, and why Amelia’s hair is too long, but to identify people we must see their faces. We can’t see the face of the person sitting on the dock, but we can see some of the man’s face.
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