Is MH370 in Indian Ocean?

The only possible conclusion from an oceanographic and recovered debris perspective is that MH370 lies in the southern Indian Ocean. That is the verdict from the highly respected Oceanographer Professor Charitha Pattiaratchi who is based at the University of Western Australia.

Did MH370 ever get found?

Despite air and sea searches of vast stretches of the Indian Ocean, the aircraft and its passengers has never been found. A recent memorial reminds that MH370 is not the only missing aircraft out there.

How deep is the Indian Ocean MH370?

The MH370 search area includes all of the major elements of the mosaic, and it lies in water depths between 635 and 6300 meters (Figure 1).

What really happened to the missing Boeing 777?

Flight MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing on 8 March 2014 with 239 people on board. To recap: Within days of flight MH370’s disappearance, authorities claimed the plane had made a U-turn, flown back over Malaysia, and eventually crashed in the southern Indian Ocean.

Where was the missing plane MH370 found?

Now, the missing passenger plane is thought with “better than even odds” to be within 100 nautical miles from the new location. Pieces of MH370 have washed up on coastlines in the western Indian Ocean in the months and years after it vanished on the night of March 8, 2014.

What was the name of the plane that crashed in the Indian Ocean?

Commonly referred to as “MH370”, “Flight 370”, or “Flight MH370”, the flight was also marketed as China Southern Airlines Flight 748 (CZ748/CSN748) through a codeshare.

What was found on Google Earth for MH370?

Missing flight MH370 ‘found’ on Google Earth riddled with BULLET HOLES, crash investigation expert claims. Images of the wreckage of the aircraft, carrying 239 passengers and crew when it vanished, have emerged. Crash investigator Peter McMahon insists he has tracked down the plane.

What kind of evidence is there for MH370?

Prof. Pattiaratchi, who has been published in over 300 scientific journals tells Airlineratings.com that the “only tangible physical evidence that is available to date is the debris from the western Indian Ocean.” “My definition of physical evidence is that something you could hold and touch.”