Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: GeoResonance survey company says “wreckage of a commercial airliner” found

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Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: GeoResonance survey company says
Malaysia Airlines Flight 370: GeoResonance survey company says "wreckage of a commercial airliner" found

The Malaysian government confirmed Tuesday that officials investigating the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 were looking into an Australian company’s claim to have located aircraft wreckage on the sea floor in the northern Bay of Bengal — thousands of miles from the search area scanned meticulously for weeks to the south.

Australian land and sea survey company GeoResonance said in a statement sent Tuesday to CBS News that it had discovered materials “believe to be the wreckage of a commercial airliner” about 100 miles south of Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal using proprietary technology which scans vast areas for specific metals or minerals.

The company’s technology is often used to help clients find mineral deposits for mining, but GeoResonance also has participated in the hunt for old warships or aircraft on the ocean floor.

 

“During the search for MH370, GeoResonance searched for chemical elements that make up a Boeing 777: aluminum, titanium, copper, steel alloys, jet fuel residue, and several other substances. The aim was to find a location where all those elements were present,” said the company in the written statement.

Scanning “multispectral images” taken from the air on March 10 — two days after Flight 370 went missing — GeoResonance says it found “an anomaly in one place in the Bay of Bengal” where many of those relevant materials were detected in significant amounts, and in a pattern which matched the approximate layout of a large aircraft.

 

The company said analysis of images take of the same area five days earlier showed the “anomaly had appeared between the 5th and 10th of March 2014.”

 

In a statement released to the press on Tuesday, Malaysian Acting Minister of Transport Hishammuddin

Hussein confirmed that his government was “working with its international partners to assess the credibility of this information.”

A U.S. official with knowledge of the investigation told CBS News on Tuesday that they were still in the early stages of gathering information about GeoResonance’s claim, but they were “very skeptical” it would lead to anything, given all the data that investigators have been working with points to the southern Indian Ocean.

A team of experts working for the International Investigation Team have been studying the data available on the flight, which includes the attempted communications between Flight 370 and satellites which led officials to focus their search in the so-called Southern Arc. They continue to analyze that data and their focus remains to the south, says CBS News transportation correspondent Jeff Pegues.

There have been many false leads in the hunt for the Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777-200 since it disappeared from commercial radar northeast of Manila on March 8.

Investigators believe the plane turned an inex…

 

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