Josh Voorhees has a Slate
article with yet more on the missing plane:
The search for Flight MH370 shifted nearly seven hundred miles to a different section of the southern Indian Ocean after a new analysis of the available data suggested that the missing 777 jetliner was flying faster than previously thought, and therefore likely ran out of fuel that much sooner.
Despite the apparent setback of shifting the search so drastically— "We are starting on a blank page," was how one Australian professor who has been following the search summed things up— there are signs that the shift may have paid almost immediate dividends, via the Washington Post:
On Friday, observers on five aircraft saw multiple objects of different colors as they searched the updated area. A New Zealand plane saw a number of objects described as “white or light”. Another Australian aircraft located the items seen by the New Zealand plane and saw two blue-gray rectangular objects. Yet another plane saw more objects in another area more than three hundred miles away.
AMSA said photos were taken and would be assessed overnight. The team will likely send out ships to investigate further and try to confirm whether the debris is related to the missing plane.
Malaysia officials— who have faced widespread criticism for how the search has played out so far— maintain that, in the words of Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein: "this new search area could still be consistent with the potential objects identified by various satellite images over the past week". That, however, doesn't exactly line up with the general consensus from the other countries involved in the search. "We have moved on" from the old search area, said John Young, manager of AMSA's, the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, emergency response division.
The good news for those doing the actual searching (assuming, of course, they're finally in the right place): the new area of focus, about seven hundred miles northeast of the last one, is in calmer waters than the last one and is several hundred miles closer to Perth, Australia, both of which should make things easier for the planes and ships sweeping the area looking for debris from the missing plane.
Rico says he still hopes they can find the black box before the battery runs out...
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