MH370 underwater search continues

Joint agency coordination centre says new analysis has refined scope of search

A handout picture made available by the Australian Joint Agency Coordination Centre (JACC) today shows three-dimensional models of the sea floor terrain which have been developed from high resolution (90 metre grid) bathymetric data from the survey in the southern part of the Indian Ocean, where the search for missing Malayasia Airlines flight MH370 has resumed Photograph: EPA/JACC HANDOUT
A handout picture made available by the Australian Joint Agency Coordination Centre (JACC) today shows three-dimensional models of the sea floor terrain which have been developed from high resolution (90 metre grid) bathymetric data from the survey in the southern part of the Indian Ocean, where the search for missing Malayasia Airlines flight MH370 has resumed Photograph: EPA/JACC HANDOUT

A new phase of the search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 began yesterday as the first of two ships began scouring the Indian Ocean.

The plane vanished from radar in March shortly after take-off and is believed to have crashed in the southern Indian Ocean, killing all 239 people on board.

After an exhaustive aerial survey, the search for the missing plane had a fourth-month hiatus while experts mapped the part of the ocean where the plane is believed to have crashed.

Two ships will use sonar technology close to the sea floor to scour the Indian Ocean for signs of the missing plane, and will send submersible devices.

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The joint agency coordination centre responsible for the search said new analysis undertaken had refined the scope of the search.

The search has moved to a primarily underwater operation, which will involve searching previously uncharted depths of the Indian Ocean.

The mission is being jointly undertaken by the Australian and Malaysian governments. – (Guardianservice)