The year 1937 had been an exciting one for Amelia Earhart. She was a famous pilot who lived an adventure-packed life, and she was about to fly around the globe.
Earhart’s journey started on May 20 in California. On June 29, she reached New Guinea, an island in the Pacific Ocean. By that time, she had traveled 22,000 miles over five continents. In just a few days, she would be back home in the United States.
Earhart was traveling with Fred Noonan, a navigator who helped her find her way as she flew. The two were scheduled to land on Howland Island—about halfway between Australia and Hawaii—in early July.
But when they looked out the window of the plane, they didn’t see any island. All they could see was the sparkling blue water of the Pacific Ocean.
They were lost, and they were quickly running out of fuel.
Earhart used the radio to call for help, but she received no response.
She used the radio again.
Silence.
Amelia Earhart would never be seen or heard from again.
Now, more than 85 years later, it remains one of history’s greatest mysteries: What really happened on that fateful day in 1937?