The Niku Hypothesis: Difference between revisions

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Mantz himself elaborated in an interview that appeared in the same paper the next day, 5 July:  "They had more than 1,000 gallons of gasoline when they left Lae, New Guinea for Howland Island." Mantz said tonight.  "Flying at 150 mile an hour, the fuel would last them twenty-four hours or about 3,500 miles. Amelia couldn't have been out of gas last Friday ... an island or even a strip of coral would have been worth taking a chance. I would have done that myself. So there they probably are, sitting and waiting and sending messages."  
Mantz himself elaborated in an interview that appeared in the same paper the next day, 5 July:  "They had more than 1,000 gallons of gasoline when they left Lae, New Guinea for Howland Island." Mantz said tonight.  "Flying at 150 mile an hour, the fuel would last them twenty-four hours or about 3,500 miles. Amelia couldn't have been out of gas last Friday ... an island or even a strip of coral would have been worth taking a chance. I would have done that myself. So there they probably are, sitting and waiting and sending messages."  


* [http://www.tighar.org/Projects/Earhart/AEhypothesis.html The TIGHAR Hypothesis]--2001 summary.
* [http://tighar.org/Projects/Earhart/Overview/AEhypothesis.html The TIGHAR Hypothesis]--Overview.

Revision as of 14:37, 12 October 2009

The fundamental conjecture that TIGHAR has been investigating since 1987 is that Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan landed on Nikumaroro on July 2, 1937.

In a New York Herald Tribune of 4 July 1937 Putnam quotes Mantz as saying that he believed "Miss Earhart landed on one of the Phoenix Islands, a group southeast of Howland."

Mantz himself elaborated in an interview that appeared in the same paper the next day, 5 July: "They had more than 1,000 gallons of gasoline when they left Lae, New Guinea for Howland Island." Mantz said tonight. "Flying at 150 mile an hour, the fuel would last them twenty-four hours or about 3,500 miles. Amelia couldn't have been out of gas last Friday ... an island or even a strip of coral would have been worth taking a chance. I would have done that myself. So there they probably are, sitting and waiting and sending messages."