Tony Romeo believes sonar images may well be wreckage of plane flown by US aviator that disappeared over Pacific in 1937.
A new grainy sonar image claims to solve the mystery of the famed aviator's disappearance, but experts say it's too soon to tell. Here's what we do know.
Tony Romeo, a former Air Force intelligence officer and the CEO of Deep Sea Vision, thinks blurry images from the seabed show the aircraft which vanished in ...
Deep Sea Vision, an ocean exploration company based in South Carolina, announced Saturday that it captured compelling sonar images of what appears to be ...
A South Carolina exploratory team claims it may have found the plane Amelia Earhart was flying when she disappeared in July, 1937.
Tony Romeo, a former U.S. Air Force intelligence officer and CEO of Deep Sea Vision, sold commercial real estate to fund his deep-sea exploration of the Pacific ...
A 16-person team led by Deep Sea Vision, a company in South Carolina, used an unmanned, underwater drone to scan more than 5200 square miles of ocean floor.
The potential discovery of Amelia Earhart's lost plane could shake up everything we know about her disappearance.
Deep Sea Vision, a South Carolina-based marine robotics company, believes its team, along with archaeologists, may have uncovered her aircraft after sonar ...
The CEO believes fuzzy images captured 5000 meters under the sea near an abandoned island in the Pacific Ocean may be Amelia Earhart's long-lost plane.
A South Carolina marine robotics company seems pretty sure it's found Amelia Earhart and Fred Noonan's Lockheed Electra in an area not previously searched ...
Deep Sea Vision announced this week that the company may have potentially located the wreckage of Earhart's Lockheed 10-E Electra aircraft at the bottom of ...
The discovery could solve the mystery of Earhart's disappearance with aviator Fred Noonan over the Pacific Ocean on a 1937 flight around the globe.
Deep Sea Vision says it captured a sonar image in the Pacific Ocean that "appears to be Earhart's Lockheed 10-E Electra" aircraft.
A South Carolina exploratory team claims it may have found the plane Amelia Earhart was flying when she disappeared in July 1937. Robotic company Deep Sea ...
The combined efforts of marine archaeologists and robotics experts may have solved one of history's greatest mysteries: what happened to Amelia Earhart.
A robotics company captured a sonar image that its chief executive believes shows Earhart's long-lost plane at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean.
A blurry image from the ocean floor could help solve the decades-old mystery of the famed aviator.
After countless searches for Amelia Earhart's plane, Deep Sea Vision's sonar images may be the latest clue for solving the decades-old mystery.
Along with navigator Fred Noonan, she was attempting to fly around the world when their plane went missing over the Pacific. If she succeeded, she would have ...
The company says they've found the wreckage on a sandy ocean floor between Howland Island and Papua New Guinea. Share.
The potential discovery of Amelia Earhart's lost plane could shake up everything we know about her disappearance.
Hoping to solve an 87-year-old mystery, explorer Tony Romeo plans to launch a mission later this year or next to find the long-lost plane, which a massive U.S. ...
An ocean explorer claims to have solved aviation's greatest mystery by finding the wreckage of Amelia Earhart's missing plane.
Amelia Earhart's plane may have been found. Why is our culture so obsessed with unsolved mysteries? It goes deeper than you think.
Tony Romeo believes his new South Carolina-based sea exploration company captured an outline of the iconic American's Lockheed 10-E Electra.
The pioneering aviator has never been found after disappearing July 2, 1937, while flying from New Guinea to Howland Island.
The grainy sonar image has reinvigorated interest in one of the most alluring mysteries: What happened to Amelia Earhart when her plane vanished in 1937?
Tony Romeo funded an $11 million deep-sea expedition and claims his team found Amelia Earhart's plane at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean.