Today, August 16, the Australian Traffic Safety Administration (ATSB) announced a set of two reports analyzing data collected during the Malaysian Airlines airline search.
Detailed seabed maps were made during the search of MH370 recently announced by Geoscience Australia on July 19.
Researchers in Australia have tirelessly attempted to locate Malaysia Airlines' missing MH370 aircraft and believe that it has been located.
A new analysis shows that no one controls the missing aircraft MH370 when it rushes into the sea.
Suspicious fragments have been discovered by a man searching for missing aircraft MH370 discovered on Madagascar beach.
According to the AP, on May 12, the Malaysian government said two fragments, discovered more in South Africa and Rodrigues Island off Mauritius,
With the two fragments supposedly almost certainly belonging to the MH370, experts judged at least part of the cockpit not to fall to the sea floor immediately.
The most expensive search for air history in the world seems to have come to an end after Australia's announcement.
Maldives police are examining information on some of the suspected pieces of MH370 that drifted to the island nation, including the same object.
A Malaysian official said the newly discovered metal piece on Reunion Island has nothing to do with the missing plane MH370, but a ladder.