A new breakthrough was found in a remote area in the southern Indian Ocean which was caught by a satellite. The debris was suspected to be wreckages from the missing flight MH370 of the Malaysian Airlines. For almost two weeks, massive multinational operations had been going on to find the whereabouts of the missing Boeing 777.
The satellite was said to have caught two images of floating debris a few miles from the coast of Perth, Australia. A cargo vessel was rerouted to check on the said wreckages floating along with Australian military aircraft that flew to the area to investigate.
The search included four planes ended their operation for today but will push through again tomorrow morning.
Since its last contact with the Malaysian air control authorities on March 8, no wreckage from the missing MH370 flight was found. The search operations for the missing jetliner have caused the biggest efforts in the aviation history. Answers are still scarce to what really happened to the jetliner carrying 239 people on board supposedly headed towards Beijing.
Join the Conversation