A new method using the geochemistry of barnacles offers a new way to track the debris path from the ill-fated MH370 flight, which went missing in 2014.
SYDNEY, July 18 A bulky barnacle-encrusted cylinder has baffled authorities since washing up on an Australian beach, with the country’s space agency suggesting today it could.
for more possible mh370 debris after a wing flap that might frb the missing malaysia jet washed up on a remote island. authorities remain optimistic tonight that they may find more debris after confirming the wreckage is from a boeing 777, the same model that vanished really without a trace 17 months ago. tonight crash investigators are about to get their first chance to examine the debris. rene marsch is out front. . reporter: reunion island shoreline is being searched inch by inch. every object that washes ashore scrutinized by investigators looking for parts of the missing malaysia airliner. the hunt for even more aircraft debris has now expandsed to nearby sarels and ma rishs island. volunteers are looking for anything noting at sea that could belong to plane. so far nothing as promising as this find which officials now