Australia has ruled out the new MH370 location, identified by British Aerospace engineer Richard Godfrey, in the area it searched between 2014 and 2017. The University of Western Australia, Oceanographer Professor Charitha Pattiaratchi’s search area is just outside the ATSB zone and just to the northeast of Mr Godfrey’s location. Below is a graphic produced […]
There have been over 30 pieces of debris found from MH370- either confirmed from the actual plane or from a Boeing 777. The search in the southern Indian Ocean didn’t start until 10 days after the loss of MH370 and that was well to the south of where the 777 is now thought to have […]
Airline Ratings
The only possible conclusion from an oceanographic and recovered debris perspective is that MH370 lies in the southern Indian Ocean.
That is the verdict from the highly respected Oceanographer Professor Charitha Pattiaratchi who is based at the University of Western Australia.
Prof. Pattiaratchi, who has been published in over 300 scientific journals tells Airlineratings.com that the “only tangible physical evidence that is available to date is the debris from the western Indian Ocean.”
“My definition of physical evidence is that something you could hold and touch.”
Prof. Pattiaratchi says that many pieces that have been discovered to date “have been proven by official sources from different countries to have originated from 9M-MRO (MH370’s registration).”