RESTART MH370 SEARCH IN A 25,OOOkm RADIUS NORTH OF ORIGINAL ONE?
Breakthrough in hunt for MH370 wreckage could reopen investigation
Published time: 22 Apr, 2017 17:08 Edited time: 23 Apr, 2017 11:26
A group of Australian researchers has narrowed down the area in which ill-fated MH370 flight could have crashed with unprecedented detail, which may lead the investigation to be re-opened and bring closure to the unsolved aviation mystery.
“As a result of oceanographic studies done by CSIRO (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) and presented to the meeting, a new search area near 35 degrees south was recommended,” Dr. David Griffin, team leader of the oceanographic study, said in a blog post.
CSIRO
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"I don't think I've ever been so consumed by a scientific question". Latest CSIRO report on MH370. ^TWhttps://blogs.csiro.au/ecos/mh370/
3:01 PM - 21 Apr 2017
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“Our final recommendation is way more precise than I dreamed we would be able to achieve,” he added.
The MH370 flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing disappeared under mysterious circumstances on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board. A multinational search and rescue operation was launched covering a 120,000 square kilometer area (46,000 square miles), but yielded no definitive results.
The search was officially called off after almost three years on January 17, 2017.
RT
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After 3yrs of fruitless search for #MH370 families to raise money to hunt for the jet themselves http://on.rt.com/84vi
12:27 AM - 7 Mar 2017
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The area CSIRO identified as a result of its latest research had been flagged as a “highly likely” resting place for the ill-fated flight in December of 2016 by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau.
In 2016, the bureau commissioned CSIRO to conduct surface current modeling to examine where floating debris from the crash may have gone.
A flaperon from the aircraft was discovered on Reunion Island off the southeast coast of Africa in July of 2015.
The nearly complete absence of any debris along the West Australian coastline helped narrow down the research parameters.
The Indian Ocean has unusual currents in several specific areas, which further exacerbated the problem of finding debris and hampered the search for years.
[Declan's comments: Let's look at this closer - Stating that a flaperon from the aircraft was discovered on Reunion Island, is nothing short of a joke. They have never personally confirmed this as being from MH370, always quoting "Almost Certainly." There has not been any written confirmation of the flaperon testing results at the time of my writing.
There is claim about having to study ocean currents and drift. My understanding is that the currents went anti-clockwise. Surely drift analysis doesn't need doing after 2 years. Another diversion/stall tactic maybe?
RT
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New suspected MH370 fragment discovered on Reunion beach, same as last year’s http://on.rt.com/76b8
1:14 AM - 8 Mar 2016
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“We had to work out what the ocean currents were doing every day for more than two years,” Dr. Griffin said.
“When we started on this, I thought we would be basing our conclusion on backtracking across the ocean. But that is doomed because of the distances involved."
“We stumbled upon something that gave much more certainty about the whereabouts of the plane than we anticipated,” he said.
Following exhaustive research, the team’s findings have narrowed the potential wreck site to a 25,000 sq km zone (9,650 square miles) north of the original 120,000 sq km search zone.
“Testing an actual flaperon has added an extra level of assurance to the findings from our earlier drift modeling work,” said Griffin, as cited by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau.
The governments of Australia, China, and Malaysia have promised to reopen the investigation if “credible new information” comes to light. Whether these latest findings will suffice remains to be seen.
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information” comes to light. ll suffice remains to be seen.