Plane Debris 'Almost Certainly' From MH370
Even if the parts are confirmed to be from MH370, experts say they may not offer any clues as to what happened on the flight.
One of the pieces of debris found along the coast of Mozambique
Two pieces of debris recently discovered along the coast of Mozambique are "almost certainly" from missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, Australian officials have said.
One of the pieces of debris found along the coast of Mozambique
Two pieces of debris recently discovered along the coast of Mozambique are "almost certainly" from missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, Australian officials have said.
Analysis of the parts by an international
investigation team showed the paint, stencilling and materials are consistent
with panels from a Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 aircraft.
The discovery backs up the theory that the
plane went down somewhere in the Indian Ocean.
However, a spokesman for the Australian
Transport Safety Bureau, said: "Close examination of the debris might
possibly give some additional information relative to the search, but it's
unlikely."
Flight MH370
disappeared on 8 March 2014 with 239 on board and is believed to have crashed
somewhere in a remote stretch of the southern Indian Ocean about 3,700 miles
(6,000km) east of Mozambique.
Until now, the only other confirmed piece of
debris from the aircraft was a wing part that washed ashore on the French
Indian Ocean island of Reunion last year.
Investigators
from Australia and Malaysia, and Boeing will examine the debris to see if it
can offer any hints about what happened on board the flight from Kuala Lumpur
to Beijing.
These could include structural deformities that
could show the angle at which the plane entered the ocean, or markings which
could indicate a mid-air explosion.
However, it is widely thought the best way of
finding out exactly what happened to the plane is to locate the main underwater
wreckage, which would hold the flight data recorders.
Crews have already covered more than 70% of the
search zone, and expect to complete their sweep of the area by the end of June.
One of the newest
pieces being examined had been discovered by a South African teenager who was
on a family holiday in Mozambique.
His parents had dismissed the debris as trash,
but nonetheless he brought it back home to look at it further.
It was placed in storage along with the
family's fishing gear and was nearly forgotten - but the boy contacted the
authorities when he read about the flaperon found on Reunion.
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