In consultation with my colleagues, I’m starting to cobble
together plans for each component of the proposed research. I’ll be posting
them as they’re developed, and updating them based on comments and rethinking.
Please take a look, and give us the benefit of your thoughts.
Component 1: The
Colonial Village
The site of the colonial village and government station, occupied
from 1939 until 1963, is not where we are likely to find Earhart-related
objects in their original contexts. On the other hand, it is precisely where we
would expect such objects to be concentrated that were picked up by the
colonists elsewhere on the island. This is why it is not surprising that we
have found fragments of aircraft aluminum in the village and virtually nowhere
else. It’s also why I regret failing to collect the small amber medicinal vial found
in the village in 2015 by Joe Cerniglia and Kim Zimmerman, with cap and base
markings that may identify it not only as American but as coming from a
pharmacy close to Earhart’s home in California. Luckily Joe and Kim recorded it
in detail[i], and we’ll try to relocate
and recover it in 2017.
The village is also
naturally where non-Earhart related objects are concentrated. So when we
find something interesting elsewhere on the island and wonder whether someone
other than Earhart and Noonan dropped it there, the best place to look for comparative
examples is in the village.
One thing we are always
interested in finding, obviously, is airplane
parts, and the village is where we’ve found them.
We’ve also developed an increasing interest in medicine and cosmetic bottles, because
we have evidence of them at the Seven Site and Shoe/Bivouac Site– of apparent
U.S. origin and very likely dating to the 1930s[ii]. We know there are
medicine/cosmetic bottles at the village site, too, but we haven’t looked at
them carefully to see how they compare with the Seven Site examples. We assume
that they’re mostly from New Zealand, Australia, or the UK, and that they
mostly date from periods later than the ‘30s, but we don’t know that. So it
would be useful to increase our comparative sample of such bottles. We
collected some from the village’s “Cosmetic Site” in 2015; it would be helpful
to collect some more.
Previous surveys have
shown that bottles are thick on the ground in the neighborhood of what we’re
pretty sure was the colonial dispensary, at the SW corner of the Government
Station. So we plan to take a brief but concentrated look at the dispensary and
collect a sample of bottles that appear to represent common types.
As for airplane parts,
those we’ve found have mostly been on residential sites, where they were
probably dropped in the course of transforming them into hair combs, fish
lures, inlay for boxes, and the like. Residential sites are distributed mostly
SE of the Government Station, an area that’s densely wooded in feral coconut
and pandanus (producing a thick, obscuring mat of deadfall on the ground. So
we’re planning a simple sweep with metal detectors of a swath starting at the
dispensary and proceeding east to the lagoon beach, to see what may be
detected. Anything that appears to be aircraft-related will be located using
GPS and collected if feasible.
[i]
Paper by Joe Cerniglia forthcoming
[ii] Medicine/cosmetic containers at locations other
than the village include:
Seven
Site
1.
Bottle shard with the
word "Mennen" embossed on it, Matches those sold by Mennen for its
Skin Bracer product and its Baby Oil product. Dates from roughly 1930 to
1950. See page 3 of https://tighar.org/Publications/TTracks/2010Vol_26/1110.pdf
2.
Bottle for skin lotion,
possibly privately compounded by a druggist. Design patent on the bottle
is American and dates to the 1930s but the bottle could have been manufactured
later than the 1930s. (Updated paper pending).
3.
Ointment jar that
analysis suggests contained anti-freckle lotion. The maker of the bottle,
Hazel-Atlas, stated that the majority of its ointment jars prior to 1930, and
many after that time, were "druggist specialties." The type of
glass used in the jar does not seem to have been one used in mass production or
wide commercial distribution. See https://tighar.org/Projects/Earhart/Archives/Research/ResearchPapers/freckleintime/FreckleInTime.html
4.
Green bottle that
appears to have contained either St. Joseph Liniment or Penetro Cough Syrup
(both manufactured by Plough, Inc. of Memphis, Tennessee). Plough
products were commonly sold in drug stores. See https://tighar.org/Projects/Earhart/Archives/Research/ResearchPapers/freckleintime/Document_20_Artifact2-8-S-27.pdf
Aukaraime
Shoe/Bivouac Site
Container cap that, based on the painted logo on
its surface, came from a bottle of Alka-Zane (antacid), Agarol (laxative), or
Cal-Bis-Ma (anti-nausea), all manufactured by William R. Warner & Company
of New York, starting in 1932. See p. 134, Amelia Earhart's Shoes.