Missing Cases

Well-Documented Mystery

Amelia Earhart Disappearance

Amelia Earhart disappeared during her 1937 world flight attempt, leaving a heavily documented but still debated aviation mystery. Stable source set includes Purdue archives, encyclopedia, and reference material; the strongest baseline remains the documented flight record and official search history.

Case identity

3 sources / 3 evidence items / updated Jun 12, 2026

Date

Jul 2, 1937

Location

Central Pacific near Howland Island

Category

Missing Cases

Status

Well-Documented Mystery

30-Second Summary

What happened?

Amelia Earhart disappeared during her 1937 world flight attempt, leaving a heavily documented but still debated aviation mystery.

Why is it famous?

Stable source set includes Purdue archives, encyclopedia, and reference material; the strongest baseline remains the documented flight record and official search history.

Current consensus?

The case has enough stable source material to inspect, while extraordinary interpretations remain provisional.

83Signal

Overall investigation significance score.

79Reality

How strongly evidence supports that the event occurred.

48Debunk

How strongly conventional explanations explain the event.

45Residue

How much unexplained material remains.

Signal basis: score reflects source count, evidence count, freshness, and search interest. Individual evidence and explanation strength is shown inside the workspace so the top score has visible provenance.

Your read

Source Reading Desk

Read the case through the reporting, not just the summary

Sources are arranged for inspection: publisher, date, original excerpts, and Atlas interpretation are separated so readers can judge the material before accepting the assessment.

3
Sources
2
Materials
2
Excerpts

#1 / Archive / Wikipedia / Date unknown

Amelia Earhart - Wikipedia

Source material

2 excerptsInspect

Original reporting is separated from Atlas interpretation.

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Source Summary

This source is part of the case record.

Atlas Interpretation

This item is separated so readers can inspect the source trail without mixing every report into one summary block.

Original Excerpts

Source text
For other uses, see Earhart (disambiguation) and Amelia Earhart (disambiguation) .
Source: Wikipedia
In 1928, she was the first female passenger to cross the Atlantic by airplane.
Source: Wikipedia
Related: Media or visual material

Case workspace

Understand the event before judging it

Start here if you are new to the case: what happened, why people still care, and what the archive currently thinks.

What happened?

Amelia Earhart disappeared during her 1937 world flight attempt, leaving a heavily documented but still debated aviation mystery.

Why it still matters

Stable source set includes Purdue archives, encyclopedia, and reference material; the strongest baseline remains the documented flight record and official search history.

Current read

The case has enough stable source material to inspect, while extraordinary interpretations remain provisional.

Why the signal is high

This case has multiple accessible sources, a durable visual record, recurring anniversary coverage, and a clear unresolved residue: the later light row is explainable, while the earlier formation accounts are harder to reconstruct cleanly.

Source-driven case file. No source means no evidence.

Case Verdict

Best current interpretation

Well-Documented Mystery

Strongly supported

For other uses, see Earhart (disambiguation) and Amelia Earhart (disambiguation) .

Likely explained

This case still needs a stronger dedicated debunk source; current interpretation should remain conservative until better analysis is attached.

Still unresolved

Which records are closest to the original event?

The case has enough stable source material to inspect, while extraordinary interpretations remain provisional.

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