MH370 mystery: 58 ‘hard objects’ found in Indian Ocean

MH370 mystery: 58 ‘hard objects’ found in Indian Ocean
Updated 15 September 2014 00:55
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MH370 mystery: 58 ‘hard objects’ found in Indian Ocean

MH370 mystery: 58 ‘hard objects’ found in Indian Ocean

KUALA LUMPUR: The Australia-led search team for the missing Malaysian flight MH370 has discovered 58 hard objects inconsistent with the Indian Ocean seabed, raising hopes of solving the over six months-long aviation mystery.
Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said the Joint Agency Coordination Center (JACC), which is leading the search for the plane is currently in the midst of retrieving the objects to be analyzed.
“We have only discovered 58 solid objects, but yet to learn if they are from (Malaysia Airlines) flight MH370. We have to verify whether the objects are the plane’s wreckage or hard rocks before coming to a conclusion,” he said in a press conference on Sunday.
Liow also said Malaysia’s Petronas will be deploying its “Go Phoenix” vessel to assist in the MH370 search mission at the southern Indian Ocean floor.
He said the asset, which is commonly used in oil exploration is expected to arrive in Perth on Sept. 21.
“Go Phoenix will help in the search mission, alongside Australia’s Furgo Discovery ship to map the ocean floor,” Liow was quoted as saying by the New Strait Times.
The Beijing-bound Boeing 777-200 carrying 239 people, including five Indians, an Indo-Canadian and 154 Chinese national mysteriously vanished on March 8 en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur.
Earlier this month, the Australian authority leading the search for the plane said that “hard spots” had been found on the Indian Ocean seabed, but that most would likely be geological features.
Experts are conducting a sonar survey of a remote patch of the southern Indian Ocean, an area never previously explored in such detail, in preparation for an underwater search for the plane.
The Australian Transport Safety Bureau had said the sonar search had provided information on the depth of the water and the composition of the sea floor in the search zone.
Last month Australian Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss said the ongoing mapping of the ocean floor had already uncovered “quite remarkable” geographical features, including the discovery of new volcanoes up to 2,000 meters high.
Six months after the jet disappeared in the Indian Ocean, aviation experts are still clueless over the world’s greatest aviation mystery.
The search operation, described by Australian officials as the largest in history, has so far turned up no debris from the plane.
Meanwhile, Malaysian Airlines (MAS) flight from Kuala Lumpur to Hyderabad was turned back on Saturday due to a defect with the plane’s auto-pilot system, the airline said in a statement.
Flight MH198 left Kuala Lumpur at 10:20 p.m. (1220 GMT) on Thursday and returned at 2:10 a.m., with all passengers and crew safe.
“The defect did not have any impact on the safety of the aircraft or passengers, however as a precautionary measure, the operating captain decided to turn back,” said MAS.