AP
In this map provided on Wednesday by the Joint Agency Coordination
Centre, details are presented in the search for the missing Malaysia
Airlines Flight 370 in the southern Indian Ocean. A metal object found
on a beach in Western Australia does not belong to the missing Malaysian
jet, authorities said on Thursday
A metal object found on a beach in Western Australia
does not belong to a Malaysian jet that vanished nearly seven weeks ago,
authorities said on Thursday as a robotic mini-submarine scouring the
Indian Ocean seabed scanned more than 90 per cent of the focused search
area.
Detailed pictures of the object were enough to
convince investigators that it wasn’t a lead in the search for the
plane, the Australian agency leading the search for the aircraft said.
“We’ve
carefully examined detailed photographs that were taken for us by the
police, and we’re satisfied that it’s not a lead in terms of the search
for MH370.” Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) spokesman Martin
Dolan said.
Australia’s joint agency co-ordination
centre announced on Wednesday that police had taken possession of an
object 10km from the town of Augusta. Malaysian officials were provided
with photographs of the object.
The find in Western
Australia came shortly after the suspension of the air and underwater
search for the plane due to poor weather conditions.
Possible
promising leads have turned out to be false alarms for weeks in the
lengthy search for the Boeing 777-200 which disappeared mid-flight on
March 8 with 239 people, including five Indians, aboard. One major
challenge that is complicated the search is that the ocean is full of
garbage.
Other objects spotted in the Indian Ocean earlier turned out to be trash, jellyfish and fishing gear.
Inclement
weather and ex-tropical cyclone Jack, which is moving south across the
Indian ocean, may delay the resumption of the search today.
“Today
the Australian Maritime Safety Authority has planned a visual search
area totalling approximately 49,567 square kilometres. The centre of the
search area lies approximately 1,584 kilometres north west of Perth,”
according to Joint Agency Coordination Centre (JACC).
The
focused underwater search area to locate the black box is defined as a
circle of 10km radius where four acoustic signals were detected.
The
remote submersible Bluefin-21 is conducting an underwater search
mission, having scoured 90 per cent of the focused area of interest.
Australia
indicated the approach to the search might be revised with more
powerful underwater vehicles if Bluefin’s search yields no results. It
is mulling deploying a more powerful system that tracked the Titanic 29
years ago to locate the wreckage of the plane.
The
Malaysia Airlines flight went missing more than a month ago, but search
officials are yet to find anything that would confirm the fate of the
plane.
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