A scientist believes he has found the wreckage of MH370, the Malaysian Airlines plane that went missing 11 years ago.
The Boeing 777 vanished while flying from Kuala Lumpur International Airport, in Malaysia, to Beijing Capital International Airport, in China, in 2014, and has not been found since.
However, tetired research scientist Vincent Lyne believes a single yellow pixel – which he calls an “anomaly” in GEBCO bathymetric – is actually the missing.
The anomaly is at Latitude: 33.02°S, Longitude: 100.27°E, aligning with the longitude of the southwestern end of Penang Airport.
This aligns with what Dr Lyne has called the Penang Longitude Deep Hole, a 19,685ft deep hole at the eastern end of Broken Ridge, a rugged and dangerous area in the Indian Ocean.
Mr Lyne said: “Hidden deep in the vast ocean where Broken Ridge meets the Diamantina Fracture Zone, a single bright pixel has emerged – pinpointing the wreckage with unprecedented accuracy.
“At 5,750 meters deep, it stood out as an extreme anomaly pointing to the potential MH370 crash site. Yet, inconsistencies in blended sonar and satellite altimeter data introduced some location uncertainty, despite the unmistakable extreme anomaly.”
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