The Mercury News Weekend

Bones found in 1940 likely of Amelia Earhart

- By Malcolm Ritter The Associated Press

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-andforth 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.

Now Jantz weighs in with another analysis of the measuremen­ts, published in January in the journal Forensic Anthropolo­gy.

For comparison, Jantz used an inseam length and waist circumfere­nce froma pair of Earhart’s trousers. He also drew on a photo of her holding an oil can to estimate the lengths of two arm bones.

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