MH370 breakthrough as expert ‘pinpoints’ precise location
A British aerospace engineer claims to have cracked one of the greatest aviation mysteries of all time: the final resting place of missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370. Richard Godfrey, a founding member of the non-government MH370 independent Group, on Wednesday said he was very confident new mapping technology had pinpointed the passenger plane’s crash site 2000km west of Perth in the southern Indian Ocean. MH370 went missing on March 8 2014 en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, with six Australians among the 239 people on board. The disappearance nearly eight years ago kicked off one of the most extensive aviation searches in history and has generated a range of theories as to where it ended up, and what happened on board. New, publicly available technology may have provided an answer. Using software based on ‘weak signal propagation’ data, Mr Godfrey’s new report says the craft should be resting about 4km under the sea in a mountainous region of the southern Indian Ocean that had been missed by previous search attempts. Taken together with satellite, weather, ocean current, and aeroplane performance data, Godfrey said the new technology should trigger a fresh search. “(The) data supports an overwhelming case for a renewed search in the prime crash location of 33.177°S 95.300°E,” he said. “The proposed search area is defined by a circle with a radius of 40 nautical miles centred on the prime crash location.” Story has more.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2021-12-01/oneworld/mh370-breakthrough-as-expert-2018pinpoints2019-precise-location
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MH370 breakthrough as expert ‘pinpoints’ precise location
A British aerospace engineer claims to have cracked one of the greatest aviation mysteries of all time: the final resting place of missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370. Richard Godfrey, a founding member of the non-government MH370 independent Group, on Wednesday said he was very confident new mapping technology had pinpointed the passenger plane’s crash site 2000km west of Perth in the southern Indian Ocean. MH370 went missing on March 8 2014 en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing, with six Australians among the 239 people on board. The disappearance nearly eight years ago kicked off one of the most extensive aviation searches in history and has generated a range of theories as to where it ended up, and what happened on board. New, publicly available technology may have provided an answer. Using software based on ‘weak signal propagation’ data, Mr Godfrey’s new report says the craft should be resting about 4km under the sea in a mountainous region of the southern Indian Ocean that had been missed by previous search attempts. Taken together with satellite, weather, ocean current, and aeroplane performance data, Godfrey said the new technology should trigger a fresh search. “(The) data supports an overwhelming case for a renewed search in the prime crash location of 33.177°S 95.300°E,” he said. “The proposed search area is defined by a circle with a radius of 40 nautical miles centred on the prime crash location.” Story has more.<br/>