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Team Says It Has Located The Wreckage Of The Missing Flight MH370

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Team Says It Has Located The Wreckage Of The Missing Flight MH370

International media stated that a group of experts recently released a fresh paper in which they claimed to have located the location of the missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370, which vanished in 2014.

On August 30, Dr. Hannes Coetzee, Professor Simon Maskell, and British aerospace engineer Richard Godfrey presented a 232-page report outlining their discoveries regarding the missing Boeing 777.

International authorities have made multiple unsuccessful attempts to find the missing aircraft, but the team has created and is using a technique called Weak Signal Propagation Reporter (WSPR) to trace MH370.

This three-year-old technique was used to track airplane MH370 while it was in the air. A WSPR link is disturbed when an airplane passes past it, and this disturbance is recorded in a global database for analysis.

The plane was found using WSPR technology, which is believed to be 1,560 kilometers west of Perth, Australia, which is located at 29.128°S and 99.934°E.

This proof supports the hypothesis that flight MH370 turned and flew over the Indian Ocean rather than continuing to its intended destination of Beijing.

The report’s authors stated in a discussion of the crash location probability map that it is “most likely that MH370 did not recover from the accelerating descent at -14,773 fpm [feet per minute] at 00:19:37 UTC and crashed at approximately 00:20:54 UTC.”

“If MH370 recovered from the descent, then the Boeing end of the flight simulations without an active pilot indicate a crash at around 00:21:47 UTC. WSPR position indicators show a possible crash with an active pilot at around 00:27:51 UTC.”

“The results of this case study align with the previous analyses by Boeing, Inmarsat, and the drift analysis by the University of Western Australia of the MH370 floating debris that has been recovered from around the Indian Ocean,” the research team said.

On March 8, 2014, Malaysian airliner MH370 took a flight from Kuala Lumpur Airport with 227 passengers and 12 crew members aboard.

The plane’s communication equipment failed many hours into the voyage, and air traffic controllers lost contact with the aircraft.

There have been many different ideas about what happened to the flight after it vanished, ranging from it being hijacked to being shot down by American forces.

Authorities also paid close attention to 53-year-old Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah after rumors that Shah might have committed suicide with all of the passengers and crew aboard circulated, according to livemint.com.

These various hypotheses were examined in a documentary that was also made available on Netflix, but the plane was never found.

Parts of MH370 were found along the coasts of countries that the Indian Ocean touched, including Mozambique, according to the documentary. In a previous article from 2016, it was recalled that a South African guy named Liam Lotter, who was still a teenager at the time, discovered a piece of flight MH370 while on vacation in Mozambique.

The Australian government declared that the fragment Lotter discovered was “almost certainly from the Malaysian Airlines Boeing 777 aircraft.”

The flap track fairing, or fairing number seven from the right wing, was the piece Lotter discovered, according to the Australian report.

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