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Scientist claims to have found the wreckage of MH370

Báo Thanh niênBáo Thanh niên18/03/2025

A scientist claims to have located the wreckage of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, which mysteriously disappeared nearly 6,000 meters below the surface in the Indian Ocean.


Flight MH370 carrying 239 passengers went missing after taking off from Kuala Lumpur International Airport (Malaysia) to Beijing (China) on March 8, 2014. This incident has become one of the greatest aviation mysteries of all time, according to The Mirror .

Một nhà khoa học tuyên bố tìm thấy xác máy bay MH370 - Ảnh 1.

Some debris of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 has been found.

Over the years, a series of multinational search campaigns have been launched, costing hundreds of millions of dollars, but have not yielded clear results.

However, recently, scientist Vincent Lyne - who used to work at the University of Tasmania (Australia), announced that he had discovered what he believed to be the missing plane wreckage through a yellow pixel, described as an "anomaly" in the global topographic model of the ocean.

Bathymetric data from GEBCO - a digital map of the ocean floor observed by Mr. Lyne - accurately identified the yellow blob at latitude: 33.02°N, longitude: 100.27°E, lying directly on the meridian of the southwest of Penang airport (Malaysia).

Dr Lyne calls this alignment the Penang Longitude Crater, a nearly 6,000m deep crater at the eastern end of Broken Ridge – a rugged and dangerous area in the Indian Ocean.

“Deep in the vast ocean, where Broken Ridge meets the Diamantina fault, a single bright pixel has appeared – pinpointing the wreck with unprecedented precision,” explains Mr Lyne.

"At 5,750m, it stands out as an anomaly, indicating the possible crash site of MH370. However, inconsistencies in sonar and satellite altimeter data have caused some uncertainty about the location, although the anomaly is unmistakable," said Mr Lyne.

Mystery of missing MH370: The final search?

Mr Lyne has previously theorised that the disappearance of MH370 was not an accident, but that the pilot, Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, from Penang, deliberately crashed the plane into Broken Ridge.

Mr Lyne said the crater was "inconsistent with the natural features of the seabed", and said this supported his theory that the plane's disappearance had been "meticulously planned".

In February, Malaysian Transport Minister Anthony Loke confirmed that British marine robotics company Ocean Infinity would join the new search for missing flight MH370.



Source: https://thanhnien.vn/nha-khoa-hoc-tuyen-bo-tim-ra-xac-may-bay-mh370-185250318124157703.htm

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