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Expedition Titanic

Expedition Titanic

Search for Amelia Earhart

cat2amelia083On July 2, 1937, Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan vanished without a trace during her attempt to become the first woman to fly around the world at the equator.

In early 2009, the Waitt Institute conducted an extensive deep-sea search for Amelia Earhart’s Lockheed Electra aircraft in the area of the South Pacific where many researchers believe she crashed. The expedition, known as CATALYST 2, involved assembling a diverse group of experts from multiple backgrounds and institutions to identify areas to search for Earhart’s plane. The CATALYST team then utilized the Waitt Institute’s REMUS 6000 Autonomous Underwater Vehicles to survey over 2,000 square miles of ocean floor at an average depth of 5,200 meters.

The Electra was not found during the expedition, but the data from the sea floor created a 2,000 square-mile exclusion zone where we now know the plane is not located. For the benefit of future researchers, the Waitt Institute is sharing all of these results, as well as a provocative, first-hand account of life aboard ship, at a specially designed new website known as Search for Amelia. One of the most comprehensive digital records on the life and legacy of Amelia Earhart available today, Search for Amelia is a collaborative site where comments and ideas about Earhart and her final flight are invited and encouraged.

Explore the expedition’s website

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View videos from the CATALYST 2 Expedition Log

NGS/Waitt Grants

The National Geographic Society/Waitt Grants Program helps qualified and experienced individuals launch the most difficult stage of a project for which to secure funding—the search. Grants are made for exploratory fieldwork that holds promise for new breakthroughs in the natural and social sciences. NGS/Waitt Grants applications are processed throughout the year and grants are awarded expeditiously to help researchers take advantage of immediate opportunities. The NGS/Waitt grants are an initiative of the National Geographic Society and the Waitt Institute.

Funded through a five-year grant from the Waitt Foundation, the NGS/Waitt Grants Program is administered by National Geographic Mission Programs and makes approximately one hundred grants annually of $5,000 to $15,000. Proposals are considered as they are received and awards are made within weeks of application.

The Waitt Grants Program upholds rigorous standards of review and scientific merit, but does not shy away from risky or unproven ideas. In that spirit, NGS/Waitt Grants support projects at the cutting edge of technology and research. The Program encourages applicants to think big—but travel light—as they look toward new frontiers around the globe. Grants are made to explorers and scientists in research fields such as biology, anthropology, and the geosciences who are working across disciplines and reacting quickly to field opportunities.

The NGS/Waitt Grants Program targets nascent initiatives and untested concepts that may have trouble finding funding through traditional sources. Where time is short and the stakes are high, NGS/Waitt Grants can ensure that opportunities for discovery are undertaken. The NGS/Waitt Grants Program is a collaboration of the National Geographic Society and the Waitt Institute, and is made possible by a grant from the Waitt Foundation.
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Protecting our oceans, restoring the seas to full productivity and inspiring us to make informed choices.

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Roberto Junco

Underwater Archaeologist, National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH)

Roberto Junco
Underwater Archaeologist

National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH)
Mexico City, Mexico

Waitt Expeditions:
Mexico: Lost Fleet (Surveyor)

Biography
Roberto Junco took his first archaeology class as an elective during his undergraduate BA degree at the American University of Paris, France. After living briefly in Bolivia and Brazil, he returned to Mexico to begin a one and a half year preparation program to enroll in the Masters Program of Archaeology, at the National School of Anthropology and History. While completing his degree, in 2003, he began collaborating with the office in charge of underwater cultural patrimony in Mexico, the Vice-Directorate of Underwater Archaeology at the National Institute of Anthropology and History. Among the projects in which he has worked are underwater archaeological surveys in Baja California, Campeche, Veracruz, and underwater site recordings in Campeche and Guerrero. In 2007 he co-directed a project at the lagoons of the volcano Nevado de Toluca.

He has written on diverse topics such as Chinese porcelain, Historical Archaeology and Spanish navigation during colonial times. He is currently working at the Subdirección de Arqueología Subacuática/INAH, planning potential survey areas for the lost Spanish galleons of the Flota de Nueva España 1630-31, as well as working in the lagoons of the Volcano Nevado de Toluca at 4200 meters above sea level, among other tasks. Roberto Junco began diving at the age of 12 and today is an extended range diver. He is also interested in rare and old books.