mh370
The great mystery of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 may be one step closer to being solved as scientists have found a new way to study the disappearance of MH370: barnacles. Barnacles are crustaceans that are usually found attached to the underside of marine vessels, other sea creatures like whales and seaside rocks, among other objects that have found themselves in the water. “The chemistry of barnacle shell layers is like a forensic recorder for drifting debris,” Gregory Herbert, a marine biologist at the University of South Florida, told National Graphic. Herbert started his barnacle investig...
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Debris discovered by Blaine Gibson on Antsiraka Beach in Madagascar has been verified as belonging to the missing Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777-200ER that disappeared on March 8, 2014. The piece was previously thought to be marine debris, but aerospace engineer Richard Godfrey has determined it was part of the plane’s nose wheel door in a newly released study. Godfrey stated that the item had “strong resemblances” to debris found by a fisherman in Madagascar on November 17, 2022. This broken O panel was found at a similar location in Antsiraka Beach. Godfrey looked at the dimensions, weight and...
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Families of those on board Malaysia Airlines flight 370, which disappeared mysteriously nearly nine years ago, called on the Malaysian government on Sunday to allow U.S. seabed exploration firm, Ocean Infinity, to mount a new search for the missing plane. The fate of flight MH370 became one of the world’s greatest aviation mysteries when it disappeared en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014. In 2018, Malaysia had Ocean Infinity search for the aircraft in the southern Indian Ocean, offering to pay up to $70 million if it found the disappearing plane. But the operation was unsuc...
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A 32″×28” piece of debris washed ashore in Madagascar following a tropical storm in March 2017. In November 2022, MH370 expert Blaine Gibson found the item with other marine debris and realized that it looked similar to other pieces of Malaysia Airlines MH370 found in the Indian Ocean. The object has not been formally analyzed, but Gibson and others believe that it belongs to the Boeing 777 plane’s landing gear. Deep cuts on the item serve as evidence that the landing gear was most likely deployed before the crash. Richard Godfrey, a British engineer working on the investigation, said, “The re...
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