The search for missing
Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 will go underwater for the first time, it has
been announced, as authorities investigate the few remaining clues they have to
locate the plane.
With the jet’s “black box”
flight recorders apparently
having fallen silent, an unmanned submersible vehicle will now be
sent down to map the bottom of the ocean in a painstaking process that
nonetheless represents the best hopes of finding any wreckage.
Today it was also revealed
that a large oil slick has been discovered in the approximate search area of
the southern Indian Ocean, which does not appear to have come from any nearby
ships.
The oil is a rare lead that
will be investigated thoroughly, those leading the search said – but comes
after more than a month in which not a single object found on the surface has
been positively linked to the missing Boeing 777.
Speaking about the decision
to dive down towards the approximate location of previously-detected “pings” –
believed to be from black boxes – Australian search orchestrator Angus Houston
said: “We haven’t had a single detection in six days, so I guess it’s time to
go underwater.”
He said the Bluefin 21
autonomous submersible would use sonar to create a high-resolution,
three-dimensional map of the ocean floor some 4,500 metres (15,000 feet) down.
But it will be a painfully
slow process. Each 24-hour mission will include four hours to dive and
resurface and four hours to analyse data, leaving 16 hours in which the vehicle
will cover just 40 square kilometres.
Houston said that while the
“pings” had been a significant lead in allowing the search area to be greatly
reduced, the public should not underestimate the scale of the challenge
recovery teams face.
“This is an area that is new
to man,” he said. “I would caution you against raising hopes that the
deployment of the autonomous underwater vehicle will result in the detection of
the aircraft wreckage — it may not.
“However, this is the best
lead we have, and it must be pursued vigorously. Again, I emphasize that this
will be a slow and painstaking process.”
While finding the black boxes
remains the only real way we are likely to ever know what happened to make
MH370 veer so wildly from its course and crash, Bluefin 21 will also have the
secondary task of locating any other wreckage from the plane that may have lain
to rest on the sea bed.
Houston said on Monday that
the visual search for debris continued on the ocean surface – but with 12 plans
and 15 ships still scouring around 47,000 square km (18,000 square miles),
their hopes of any success have “greatly diminished”.
“We’ve got no visual objects,”
he said. “The only thing we have left at this stage is the four transmissions
and an oil slick in the same vicinity, so we will investigate those to their
conclusion.”
It will be a number of days
before a full analysis of the oil slick can be completed – and it will likely
be many more before we have any indication of whether Bluefin 21 will unearth
the missing jet.
-The Mail
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