Amelia Project Flight Set
for June 23 Launch
Contemporary aviatrix Amelia Rose
Earhart made a stop at EBACE last week, one month before she takes off from
Oakland, Calif., for The Amelia Project, attempting a circumnavigation flight
that her unrelated namesake never completed in a Lockheed 10 Electra in 1937.
She will be flying a much more reliable Pilatus PC-12 NG equipped with an
Inmarsat-based Satcom1 satcom system that will enable her to stream the entire
flight to followers around the globe. Planning for the project started a
year-and-a-half ago, the Denver TV newscaster said, and it was officially
announced at EAA AirVenture last year. The east-to-west journey will begin
June 23, weather permitting, and make 17 stops along the 24,000-mile route. No
stop is planned at Howland Island, Amelia Mary Earhart’s destination when she
disappeared on her 1937 attempted circumnavigation. However, Earhart intends to
overfly the point from which the last transmission from her namesake was heard,
and announce there via satcom the names of 10 aspiring female pilots awarded
scholarships by a foundation she established. Shane Jordan, also from Denver,
will accompany Earhart and share piloting duties. If successful, the 31-year-old
Earhart will become the youngest woman to circumnavigate the earth in a
single-engine aircraft. Sponsors include Pilatus, Honeywell, Inmarsat and
Satcom1, as well as BBA Aviation companies Signature Flight Support and Dallas
Airmotive.
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