Photo: Getty Images
Purdue University has announced plans to support a new search for Amelia Earhart's lost plane this coming November. Detailed in a press release issued on Wednesday to mark the 88th anniversary of the pioneering pilot's disappearance, the forthcoming expedition will be a joint effort from the Purdue Research Foundation and the Archaeological Legacy Institute. The focus of the search will be a curious anomaly dubbed the Taraia Object. First spotted in satellite images several years ago, the weird formation resembling a small aircraft is located in a lagoon on the Pacific Island of Nikumaroro, where it has long been believed Earhart's aircraft ultimately came to rest.
More on this story, including a video showcasing the tantalizing object that just might be Earhart's lost plane, at the Coast to Coast AM website.