 Yo, yo, what's up guys, it's Chris Pike. My friends call me Big C. Back in action today, I got some more heartbeat moments for you, that's right. Today's topic, however, or videos and video topics, is Amelia Earhart. It's possible that an 87 year old mystery has just been solved. Now, it's still, it's only possible, but there are sonar images coming out from a company called Deepsea Vision that may or may not have found Amelia's Earhart's Lockheed 10E electric aircraft in the Pacific Ocean. In particular, it was found about 100 miles away from Howlin Island, which is kind of in between, you know, that island in Hawaii, which is roughly ballpark where they were supposed to be. And here's the thing, it was 16,000 feet below the surface. So it wasn't exactly in shallow water, but they've got some sonar images coming in and it looks pretty darn convincing, not gonna lie. Now, for those of you that don't know, Amelia Earhart, the first lady that wanted to circumnavigate the globe in an airplane and 87 years ago, that was a hell of a thing. She also had her navigator with a Fred Noon who has also been missing and there have been theories and just mystery and theory and theory and theory for years. Nobody knows what happened to them. This is a possible clue or a possible needle in a haystack, we'll see. So anyways, let's get right into the videos. I'll show you what I'm talking about. All right, so here we are. We're in my heartbeat here on h.ki. Link's in the description below and you'll see here that I've got a whole bunch of moments but what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna click on moments and then when I flip through it here, you'll see I've got some Amelia Earhart moments. Now, most of them are from one video but I've got another one from another one that I wanted to show you. So let's just start going here. I'll click on the first one and let's get cracking. She vanished flying her twin engine aircraft in 1937. Now, one man bent on solving the mystery believes he's found a major clue. All right, so there we go. Like I said, she disappeared 87 years ago. She was the biggest star almost, the female star in the world. She was like today's Taylor Swift. She was just a rock star. She had done so many trips across the Atlantic Ocean. She had done Pacific Ocean and bunch of trips across North America. Like one trip across North America for sure, maybe more, just an absolute star and here we go. This guy here, Romeo, is his name. How cool is that? Thinks he found it. Let's go to the next one here at the next moment. The Romeo believes this sonar image could show Earhart's plane, which was never recovered at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean. So there you go. He was out there in his $9 million underwater submersible looking at images, doing sonar images and they came across this. Now you're probably wondering why didn't he just send a camera down here but they actually found it 60 days after because they had so many images going through them that they were going through them and then it wasn't until 60 days into their expedition that they saw this image. So there you go. That was a look at the sonar image and of course I had some at the beginning here. Now let's go ahead and listen to what he has to say here. Well you'd be hard pressed to convince me that it's anything but an aircraft for one and two that it's not a milia's aircraft. Romeo. So he's pretty darn confident. Now keep in mind that he's got $11 million of his own money invested in this so it is in his best interest to hype this up. So you can't exactly look at this as objective but impressive nonetheless. Let's skip forward a little bit here. Let's see what the data caught. Where the team was reviewing the sonar data collected by a state of the art underwater drone when something caught their eye. I mean it was, it's a real moment. A sonar expert telling NBC News it's too soon to say for sure that the images show a plane let alone air hearts but that it's an exciting possibility worth going back to confirm. So there you go. So a sonar expert is a little bit more, not quite as jubilant so to speak but they've got a really good looking shot there. It's in the right area 100 miles from Howland's or Howland Island. It's 16,400 feet deep. Like it's kind of where it's supposed to be. So anyways let's click forward and let's take a look at the next moment here. No other known crashes in the area and certainly not of that era. So that's a good point here he raises. There was no other known crashes in that area. Apparently there was a float planes were stored on Howland Island during World War II but there's no real, there's no I guess history of anything being shot down in that area in and around that time. So it's better, it looks better for it being an Amelia Earhart type thing. So let's go forward a little bit more here. She was taken about 100 miles from Howland Island halfway between Australia and Hawaii. Earhart and her navigator expected to land there in July 1937 for refueling stop on her journey around the world. So that's the exact area that are pretty close to the exact area where they found it. And again this is kind of in keeping where they thought that the plane might have gone down. If you're a huge Amelia Earhart fan there's a potential that they were, her and maybe Fred Noonan, her navigator were washed up on an island. It became Castaways on Noko Murrow Island which is in the vicinity. So you never ever know. Maybe they swam to it. But here we go. Let's click forward to the next moment here. Yo's team will return to the site hopefully later this year. So the next step is confirmation and there's a lot we need to know about it. And it looks like there's some damage or I mean it's been sitting there for 87 years at this point. So there you go. He has to return to it. They've got to send a camera down in ROV. And again they didn't see this image till 60 days into there. I believe they're 90 right into their expedition. So it made it very difficult to do that. So that is the first set of heartbeats that I wanted to show you. I've got another one here and I wanted to add to it though. I'm going to go to my heartbeat. I'm going to go to moments. And then here we go. I just selected one moment here from this one cause there's a lot of similarity in the different newscast but check this one out. Look at that. This is the interesting one. Look at this image here. This is the Sonar image. And then this is the Vega. Was it a 5B that she was flying? I can't remember the name of it but I think it was, yeah. The 10E electroplane. Sorry it wasn't the 5B. So I mean, pretty convincing especially if you look at the wings and the tail. I don't know. These look a little bit more straight to the side and these ones look a little bit backwards but again, I'm no expert in this area. So anyways, I wanted to bring that to your attention but that's today's news. It's a pretty big deal. Let me know what you think about this in the comments below. Thanks for watching.