Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

The location of a piece of possible debris from Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 is consistent with theories about where the wreckage may lie, Australia’s transport minister said Thursday as victims’ families called for a full search of the east African coast.

The metal fragment, which could be part of the missing Boeing 777’s horizontal stabilizer, was found by American adventurer Blaine Gibson in a sandbank off Mozambique.

Possible debris from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 of a Boeing 777 has been found off Mozambique and is being examined by investigators. The object has the words "NO STEP" on it and could be from the plane's horizontal stabilizer — the wing-like parts attached to the tail, sources say. Courtesy of Blaine Gibson

It was being taken to Australia where it will be examined by international specialists and officials from Malaysia.

Early photographic analysis of the object suggests it could have come from the jetliner.

The discovery was first reported by NBC News on Wednesday and was put on show Thursday by officials in Mozambique.

Gibson, who is from Seattle but who is attempting to visit every country in the world, has blogged extensively about the search for MH370.

He told NBC News that he chartered a boat while visiting Mozambique to take him to a remote sandbar where a lot of debris tends to wash ashore. Gibson said he'd made similar searches in other locations without any success.

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings. This site is protected by recaptcha

"I decided to take a day and go somewhere, go beachcombing, sure I had the thought of maybe getting very lucky and finding something that was from the plane, but it was also an interesting excursion."

Related: MH370 Pilot Treated as 'Guilty Until Proven Innocent'

He said he didn’t want to “make any judgment” about whether the part was from MH370, but added: “It is part of an aircraft, that's pretty clear, it's part of a big aircraft [but] my personal opinion and thoughts on it are not what matter. What matters is what the experts say when they investigate it.”

The Boeing 777 vanished almost exactly two years ago en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 people aboard and is thought to have crashed into the southern Indian Ocean.

“The location of the debris is consistent with drift modelling commissioned by the Australian Transport Safety Bureau (ATSB) and reaffirms the search area for MH370,” Australian Transport Minister Darren Chester said in a statement.

He later told reporters that the object was “of interest to us” but it was “way too early” to confirm if it was anything to do with MH370.

Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai said Wednesday on Twitter that there was a "high possibility debris found in Mozambique belongs to" a Boeing 777, but he said that was "yet to be confirmed and verified."

The object has the words "NO STEP" on it and could be from the plane's horizontal stabilizer — the wing-like parts attached to the tail. It was discovered by an American who has been blogging about the search for MH370.

If was found in the Mozambique Channel between Mozambique and Madagascar, the same corner of the southern Indian Ocean where the only confirmed piece of debris, a flaperon, was found last July.

João Abreu, head of Mozambique's National Civil Aviation Institute, said: "We can not confirm the airplane model, and we cannot confirm which airlines this wreck belongs to. This piece was discovered on our coast, and we are not sure that this piece belongs to this airplane or that plane."

The latest discovery prompted the support group for relatives of those on board to call for the coastlines of Mozambique and Madagascar to be “scoured thoroughly.”

“We urge states with assets in the East Coast of Africa to support such an effort,” Voice370 said in a statement. “We also seek support from naval powers to supply search assets that allow searches closer to uninhabited or swampy portions of the coast be searched effectively.”

The development comes daysahead of the second anniversary of the jet's disappearance on March 8, 2014.

Almost three-quarters of an internationally set 46,000-square-mile search zone has been covered so far in the hunt for the missing airliner — an area of ocean floor larger than the state of South Carolina.

The operation is due to be completed by the middle of this year. The Joint Agency Coordination Center says that if no "credible new information" about the jet's location emerges, the search will end.