• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer

Technologies.org

Technology Trends: Follow the Money

  • Technology Events 2026-2027
  • Sponsored Post
  • Technology Markets
  • About
    • GDPR
  • Contact

Amelia Earhart’s Aircraft Believed to be Found by Unconventional Team of Experts

January 29, 2024 By admin Leave a Comment

Deep Sea Vision Sonar Image May Unlock One of the Greatest Mysteries in Aviation History

CHARLESTON, S.C., Jan. 29, 2024 – After an extensive deep-water search, a talented group of underwater archaeologists and marine robotics experts have unveiled a sonar image that may answer the greatest modern mystery – the disappearance of Amelia Earhart.

Captured westward of Earhart’s projected landing point, in a swath of the Pacific untouched by known wrecks, the image reveals contours that mirror the unique dual tails and scale of her storied aircraft. Deep Sea Vision (DSV), a Charleston, South Carolina-based marine robotics company led by CEO Tony Romeo, was pursuing the missing aircraft using the “Date Line theory” of her disappearance nearly 87 years ago. Originally theorized in 2010 by Liz Smith, a former NASA employee and amateur pilot, the Date Line theory attributes Earhart’s disappearance to simply forgetting to turn the calendar back one day as she flew over the International Date Line. Smith suggested that Amelia’s navigator, Fred Noonan, miscalculated his celestial star navigation by simply forgetting to turn back the date from July 3 to July 2 as they flew across the Date Line, creating a westward navigational error of 60 miles.

As a private pilot, DSV’s CEO Tony Romeo and his brother Lloyd Romeo believed the idea had merit and began digging deeper into the celestial math Smith had laid out. The Romeos came to believe that after 17 hours of exhausting flying it was quite plausible that Earhart’s navigator Fred Noonan could have made such an error. The theory and area described by Smith had never been searched – until now.

Romeo was not surprised to find the aircraft intact, saying, “We always felt that she [Earhart] would have made every attempt to land the aircraft gently on the water, and the aircraft signature that we see in the sonar image suggests that may be the case.” Romeo hopes they can answer that question very soon. “We’re thrilled to have made this discovery at the tail end of our expedition, and we plan to bring closure to a great American story.”

The Deep Sea Vision team, a diverse group of experts, proved that diligent efforts and next-generation technology could take on the monumental task of finding Earhart’s Lockheed Electra. For 90 days, the DSV team searched across 5,200 square miles of the Pacific Ocean floor, more than all previous searches combined. Their secret weapon, the HUGIN 6000, is an autonomous underwater marvel, modified by their own hands to outperform any underwater submersible used before. It is the most capable system available in the world, able to reach full ocean depth. DSV further improved the equipment by modifying the side scan sonar to search nearly 1,600-meter-wide swaths instead of the normal 450 meters. The changes were made possible by DSV President of Operations, Craig Wallace, who Romeo recruited directly from the sonar manufacturer to help put the expedition together.

The team launched the expedition out of a tiny island in the Pacific Ocean about a four-day cruise from where the discovery was made. Each dive of the sonar equipment lasted nearly two days and collected several terabytes of data scanning the sea floor. The international team worked around the clock, analyzing the imagery using cutting edge software that was being written as the mission went along. Their discovery, made at the conclusion of the expedition, was a testament to technological triumph and the unyielding pursuit of closure for an American icon.

Earhart’s fate has been the source of speculation and conspiracy theories since her mysterious disappearance in 1937. She remains a defining icon of her generation, women’s rights and a pioneering spirit of early aviation. DSV believes they are one step away from closure to this great mystery and will be keeping all other information, including the exact location, strictly confidential. While Romeo is very optimistic about their find, he acknowledges that there was a great deal of internal debate about whether to release the sonar image publicly. Many prominent authorities have been working to validate DSV’s findings, including Dorothy Cochrane, Aeronautics Curator at the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum, who stated, “We are intrigued with DSV’s initial imagery and believe it merits another expedition in the continuing search for Amelia Earhart’s aircraft near Howland Island.”

Unlocking the mystery of Earhart’s whereabouts is one of several projects for Romeo and Deep Sea Vision. The investment they spent to launch the company is already leading to more exciting projects. DSV has already concluded a yet to be announced project in the Pacific and is currently providing their technology for a longer-term project in Australia.

About Deep Sea Vision
Deep Sea Vision is a marine robotics company specializing in deep ocean exploration and survey. With the latest variant of the HUGIN 6000, Deep Sea Vision owns the most advanced autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) commercially available. Deep Sea Vision was founded by Tony Romeo, a graduate of the United States Air Force Academy, and led by Operations Chief, Craig Wallace, who was the former HUGIN product manager at Kongsberg Maritime. Deep Sea Vision is aiming to become the market leader in mineral exploration and habitat mapping over the next decade.

SOURCE: Deep Sea Vision

Filed Under: News Tagged With: press release

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Footer

Recent Posts

  • The unveiling of Intel® Core™ Ultra Series 3 processors marks the company’s first AI PC platform built on Intel’s own 18A process technology
  • Qi2 Wireless Charging Momentum, CES 2026, Las Vegas
  • Consumer Tech & Durable Goods Outlook: Flat Topline, Fragmented Opportunity
  • Qualcomm Acquires Ventana Micro Systems: Why It Matters, What It Changes, and Why Arm Should Pay Attention
  • Scylos Secures $3M Seed Round to Rethink Endpoint Security from the Ground Up
  • Databricks has just closed a massive new funding round that pushes its valuation to roughly $134 billion
  • Nu Quantum’s $60M Leap Toward the Entanglement Era
  • Haven Energy Raises $40M to Scale Virtual Power Plants Across the U.S. Grid
  • Supermicro Expands NVIDIA Blackwell Portfolio with Liquid-Cooled HGX B300 Systems
  • UMC and imec Push Silicon Photonics Into Its Next Act

Media Partners

  • Market Analysis
  • Cybersecurity Market
Iran’s Unreversible Revolt: When Internal Rupture Meets External Signals
Global Robotics Trends 2026: Where Machines Start Thinking for Themselves
Orano’s U.S. Enrichment Project and the Rewiring of American Nuclear Strategy
U.S. Tech Employment Slows as Hiring Cools and AI Reshapes Demand
Semiconductor Equipment Boom, 2025–2027, Global Manufacturing Outlook
ServiceNow Sharpens Its Competitive Edge by Making Moveworks the Front Line of the Enterprise
NVIDIA Acquires SchedMD: How Owning the Brain of the Cluster Sharpens NVIDIA’s Competitive Edge
Cloudflare Year in Review 2025: How the Internet Quietly Rewired Itself
The $250 Billion Stablecoin Market: Who Uses It, Why It Exists, and Where the Growth Actually Comes From
Will It Save Intel? The $1.6B SambaNova Question
CrowdStrike–SGNL Deal Signals Identity’s Promotion to the Center of Cyber Defense
CrowdStrike Backs the Next Wave of AI-Native Cybersecurity Startups
Afero and Texas Instruments Redefine Cybersecurity at the IoT Edge
Stellar Cyber Climbs to #2 in MSSP Alert 2025 Rankings, Signaling Deepening Trust Across the Global SecOps Ecosystem
Ascend 2026, May–October 2026, Global Event Series
Black Hat Europe 2025, December 9–12, London, United Kingdom
C1 and Texas Southern University Launch Cybersecurity Lab, Houston, Texas
GDIT Wins $285M Cybersecurity Contract to Fortify Virginia’s Digital Backbone
Why ServiceNow Wants Armis: Security as the Missing Layer in the Entrprise Workflow Empire
Opal Security Names Howard Ting CEO as AI Access Governance Enters Its Defining Moment

Media Partners

  • Market Research Media
  • Technology Conferences
Spangle AI and the Agentic Commerce Stack: When Discovery and Conversion Converge Into One Layer
PlayStation and the Quiet Power Center of a $200 Billion Gaming Industry
Adobe FY2025: AI Pulls the Levers, Cash Flow Leads the Story
Canva’s 2026 Creative Shift and the Rise of Imperfect-by-Design
fal Raises $140M Series D: Scaling the Core Infrastructure for Real-Time Generative Media
Gaming’s Next Expansion Wave, 2026–2030
Morphography — A Visual Language for the Next Era of AI
Netflix’s $83B Grab for Warner Bros. & HBO: A Tectonic Shift in Global Media
Clipbook Raises $3.3M Seed Round — And the PR World Just Got a Warning Shot
BrandsToShop.com — the right domain to have for Cyber Monday, Black Friday and every loud shopping season ahead
CES 2026, January 7–10, Las Vegas
Humanoids Summit Tokyo 2026, May 28–29, 2026, Takanawa Convention Center
Japan Pavilion at CES 2026, January 6–9, Las Vegas
KubeCon + CloudNativeCon Europe 2026, 23–26 March, Amsterdam
4YFN26, 2–5 March 2026, Fira Gran Via — Barcelona
DLD Munich 26, January 15–17, Munich, Germany
SPIE Photonics West 2026, January 17–22, San Francisco
Gurobi Decision Intelligence Summit, October 28–29, 2025, Vienna
MIT Sloan CFO Summit, November 20, 2025, Cambridge
Roblox Expands the Future of Creation at RDC 2025

Copyright © 2022 Technologies.org

Media Partners: Market Analysis & Market Research and Exclusive Domains