Cyclone threatens to disrupt search for missing MH370
April 21, 2014
Australian
Navy officer Morgan Macdonald stands in a rigid hull inflatable boat as
he observes markers dropped from a Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF)
P3K Orion, after an object was sighted in the southern Indian Ocean. –
Reuters pic, April 21, 2014.A tropical cyclone was
threatening to hamper the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines
flight today, as a submarine drone neared the end of its mission
scouring the southern Indian Ocean sea bed with still no sign of
wreckage.
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The
search for flight MH370, which vanished on March 8 with 239 people on
board, has narrowed to a 10 sq km patch of sea floor about 2,000 km west
of the Australian city of Perth.
Search authorities and the
Australian and Malaysian governments have said a series of sonar
signals, or "pings", traced to the area may have emanated from the
plane's "black box" and present the most credible lead as to its
whereabouts.
However no pings have
been detected in almost two weeks and authorities now fear that, with
the flight data recorder's battery several weeks past its expected
expiry date, the black box may not emit further signals.
A US Navy
remote controlled submarine, the Bluefin-21, was on its ninth mission
scanning the largely unmapped stretch of sea bed where the pings are
believed to have come from, with still no trace found, Australian search
officials said today.
"Bluefin-21 has searched approximately
two-thirds of the focused underwater search area to date. No contacts of
interest have been found to date," the Joint Agency Coordination Centre
said in a statement.
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