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Saturday, 29 March 2014
Ships Recover Unidentified Objects in Flight 370 Search
Ships Recover Unidentified Objects in Flight
370 Search
By Michael Sin and Iain
McDonaldMar
30, 2014 8:23 AM GMT+1100
Source: Australian Maritime Safety Authority via
Bloomberg
This handout satellite image made available by the Australian Maritime Safety
Authority...
This handout satellite image made available by the Australian Maritime Safety
Authority shows a map of the planned search area for missing Malaysian Airline
System Bhd. Flight MH370 on March 29, 2014.
Source: Australian Maritime
Safety Authority via Bloomberg
This handout satellite image made available by the Australian Maritime Safety
Authority shows a map of the planned search area for missing Malaysian Airline
System Bhd. Flight MH370 on March 29,
2014.
Australian and Chinese ships recovered unidentified objects from the Indian Ocean as the
search for Malaysian Air Flight 370 enters its fourth week. Australia’s HMAS Success
and China’s Haixun 01
retrieved “a number of objects from the ocean but so far no objects confirmed to
be related” to the missing plane, the Australian Maritime Safety
Authority said in a statement
yesterday.
It was the first time in the search that material had been picked up. The
U.K.’s Daily Mail cited Chinese state media as saying that three objects turned
out to be pieces of rubbish.
Six ships are on the way to the revised search zone, bringing the total to 10
in the international effort, the Australian agency said in a morning update. In
addition, the HMAS Toowoomba frigate left Perth last night and should arrive to
the search area in about three days, it said. Eight aircraft sighted multiple
items yesterday in a search area that covered about 252,000 square kilometers
(97,300 square miles), while 10 planes will be involved in today’s search.
White, red and orange “suspicious objects” had been seen as the Chinese ship
Jinggangshan, carrying two helicopters, joined the Haixun 01 in the search area,
the official Xinhua news agency said. Equipment from the U.S. Navy to track the
plane’s black box recorder has arrived in Perth and will be deployed when needed,
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said
yesterday. Source:AFP/Getty Images
Malaysia's acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein, center, speaks as
Ahmad...
Malaysia's acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein, center, speaks as
Ahmad Jauhari Yahya, chief executive officer of Malaysian Airline System Bhd.
(MAS), left and Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, director general of Malaysia's
Department of Civil Aviation, look on during a news conference at the Putra
World Trade Center (PWTC) in Kuala Lumpur on March 28, 2014.
Source:AFP/Getty Images
Malaysia's acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein, center, speaks as
Ahmad Jauhari Yahya, chief executive officer of Malaysian Airline System Bhd.
(MAS), left and Azharuddin Abdul Rahman, director general of Malaysia's
Department of Civil Aviation, look on during a news conference at the Putra
World Trade Center (PWTC) in Kuala Lumpur on March 28,
2014.
Large Area
Time may be running out as the battery-powered beacons that help locate the
black boxes on the Boeing Co. (BA)’s 777
last about 30 days. The latest lead in the search was based on radar and
performance data as the jet flew between the South China Sea and
Malacca Strait, authorities said. It shows the jet moved faster, using more
fuel, and may not have crashed as far south as estimated earlier.
“This is still an attempt to search a very large area, and for surface
debris, which will give us an indication of where the main aircraft wreckage is
likely to be,” Martin Dolan, chief commissioner of the Australian
Transport Safety Bureau, said March 28 in Canberra. “This has a long way to
go yet.”
Examinations of the home flight simulator of the jet’s captain, Zaharie Ahmad
Shah, haven’t found anything sinister, Malaysia’s Acting Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein
said yesterday. The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, Britain’s MI6 and Chinese
intelligence agencies are helping with the investigation, he said.
FBI Analysis
Technicians from the U.S. Federal Bureau of
Investigation have almost finished extracting data from the pilot’s digital
media, which include the hard drive from his flight simulator, and the bureau is
almost halfway done in the analysis of that data, said a U.S. official, speaking
on condition of anonymity because the probe remains active. The official said no
smoking gun has emerged thus far, though the FBI’s work won’t be complete for
another few days or a week.
Even then, the official said, what may seem irrelevant now may take on new
significance in light of future developments or information gleaned in the
multinational investigation into what occurred on the plane.
The new search zone is 1,100 kilometers (700 miles) to the northeast of the
previous
area, off Australia’s west coast. Investigators narrowed in on the area with an
analysis assuming that Flight 370 traveled at close to constant velocity.
P3 Orion
A New Zealand P3 Orion
patrol plane found 11 objects inside a small radius, about 1,600 kilometers
directly west of Perth, Air Vice-Marshall Kevin Short, commander of joint forces
New Zealand said in a telephone interview yesterday. While the objects were
mostly rectangular, white and less than 1 meter (3.3 feet) in size, there was a
larger, slightly blue object and another colored orange and about the size of a
shipping buoy.
Five aircraft spotted “multiple objects of various colors” before the search
concluded on March 28, according to the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, or
AMSA.
Yesterday’s search was conducted in suitable conditions that may deteriorate,
AMSA said. The search area is about 1,850 kilometers west of Perth and spans
319,000 square kilometers, compared with an 80,000-kilometer region scoured on
March 27.
Because the latest search zone is closer to Australia than previous
locations, aircraft have more time over the ocean. The hunt also moves outside
of the so-called Roaring Forties, a region between the 40th and 50th degrees of
latitude south known for strong winds and wave conditions. Ocean depth in the
area ranges from 2,000 meters to 4,000 meters.
Credible Lead
“This is the most credible lead to where debris may be located,” AMSA said.
Along with Chinese and Australian vessels, the Australian
Geospatial-Intelligence Organisation is redirecting satellites to scan the
region as well. The Federal Aviation
Administration and the U.K.’s Air Accidents Investigation Branch are also
assisting the search.
“You’ve practically got everybody in the aviation industry involved in the
search and rescue,” Hishammuddin told reporters after meeting with the families
of passengers. “This is the best time for everybody to relook, not only on the
question of the aviation landscape but also on the issue of security and
defense.”
The search for Flight 370 initially focused on the Gulf of Thailand, south of Vietnam, before switching to the Malacca Strait and Andaman
Sea after radar data showed that the plane had backtracked west across the
Malaysian peninsula.
No Survivors
The hunt was then extended thousands of miles from the original search zone
after analysis of satellite signals suggested the plane had continued flying for
five hours in one of two possible arcs over the Indian Ocean or Asian landmass.
Inmarsat Plc (ISAT)
concluded last week that the profile of satellite pings showed the jet
definitely took the southern arc, prompting Malaysian
Airline System Bhd. (MAS) to say that the 777 had crashed into the ocean and
that there was no hope of survivors.
Satellite sightings had appeared to be helping the multinational search to
home in on wreckage from the aircraft that vanished on March 8 with 239
passengers and crew.
Photos from a Thai orbiter on March 24 showed more than 300 objects measuring
2 meters to 15 meters floating 2,700 kilometers southwest of Perth, an area
close to prior sightings from space. A Japanese satellite detected a dozen
pieces of possible debris in a March 26 image, Kyodo News Service said.
No Wreckage
Areas where satellite images had previously shown objects in the ocean were
checked and no plane wreckage had been found, Andrea Hayward-Maher, an AMSA
spokeswoman, said on March 28.
Since the focus shifted to the southern Indian Ocean more than a week ago,
planes have made multiple sightings of debris, including a wooden pallet with
straps and unidentified green and
orange objects, none of which have been recovered.
The Malaysian aircraft may have cruised steadily across the Indian Ocean
after diverting from its route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur, according
to Inmarsat. The jet flew over the equator and away from the satellite,
according to analysis by the engineers, spokesman Chris McLaughlin said.
Recovery of the data and cockpit-voice recorders from the 777, which can emit
pings for 30 days after becoming immersed in water, would help investigators
decipher the plane’s movements and its pilots’ actions in the hours after
contact was lost.
The search for debris is critical so “we can reverse-forecast the wind,
current and sea state since March 8 to recreate the position where MH370
possibly went into the water,” Commander Tom Moneymaker, an oceanographer with
the U.S. 7th Fleet, said in a Navy News Service article.
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