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The Australian Transport Safety Bureau announced on 22 June that a piece of debris found on an Australian island earlier in June was not from Flight 370. [232] On 20 July, the Australian government released photos of the piece of debris found on Pemba Island around 24 June, believed to be an outboard wing flap.
The barnacles attached to the Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 debris offer up partial clues about where it actually crashed. A Weird Animal May Finally Expose Where Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 ...
A policeman and a gendarme stand next to a piece of debris from an unidentified aircraft found in the coastal area of Saint-Andre de la Reunion, in the east of the French Indian Ocean island of La ...
When the flaperon piece of MH370 washed ashore on Reunion Island in July of 2015, ... He also led an international research team to find a partial drift path of the MH370 debris, thanks to ...
English: This map displays the location of Reunion Island in relation to the known flight path of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 (shown in red; based on civilian & military radar), calculated flight path (shown in yellow; based on analysis of communications between Flight 370 and the Inmarsat satellite communications network), and the underwater search area at the time the debris was found ...
The discovery in late July 2015 of debris from a Boeing 777, on a beach on Réunion island, east of Madagascar, suspected (and later deemed "highly likely") [71] [72] to be from MH370, quickly led to renewed Internet speculation that the plane had been shot down near Diego Garcia, which is 1,475 miles (2,374 km) away from Réunion, [73] out of ...
SAINT-ANDRE, Reunion (AP) -- A barnacle-encrusted wing part that washed up on a remote Indian Ocean island could help solve one of aviation's greatest mysteries, as investigators work to connect ...
On 29 July 2015, airliner marine debris was found on a beach in the commune, later confirmed to be a part of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 which disappeared about 4,000 km (2,500 mi) east of Réunion on 8 March 2014.