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Amelia Earhart Would Have a Hard Time Disappearing in 2019

Global navigation systems and onboard software make it harder to fly off the map

Brian Strzempkowski
Shawn Pruchnicki
Fri, 01/25/2019 - 12:03
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When Amelia Earhart took off in 1937 to fly around the world, people had been flying airplanes for only about 35 years. When she tried to fly across the Pacific, she—and the world—knew it was risky. She didn’t make it and was declared dead in January 1939.

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In the 80 years since then, many other planes have been lost around the world and never found again—including the 2014 disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, over the Indian Ocean.

As flight instructors and aviation industry professionals, we know that increasingly advanced technologies are getting better at tracking planes, even across great expanses of water far from land. These systems allow aircraft to navigate much more easily, and many allow real-time flight tracking across much of the globe.

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