Australian company detects 'wreckage of a commercial airliner' in the Bay of Bengal which appeared on sea-floor scans the same time the Malaysian Airlines plane vanished

Sea-floor surveying company GeoResonance was scanning for metals along the ocean floor when they got a hit for an object with the same metallic make-up as a commercial plane

They say the item appeared between '5th and 10th of March 2014'

The dates fit MH370's disappearance, which vanished March 8



The site - 1000 miles from Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal - is at the northern tip of the initial search area

But it's thousands of miles from the current concentrated search area

The Joint Agency Coordination Centre has dismissed the claim, saying it still believes the current search area is MH370's most-likely location



It follows an announcement from Australian PM that debris from the aircraft would have sunk by now

Former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad has expressed doubts that MH370 crashed into the Indian Ocean and blamed Boeing for its fat

An Australian company says it has located the wreckage of a commercial airliner lying on the ocean floor in the Bay of Bengal - an area located in the northern tip of the original search area, but thousands of miles from where authorities are currently focused.



Tech firm GeoResonance claims its sensor technology has found the wreckage of a plane in the Bay of Bengal, 118 miles south of Bangladesh.

The company said images taken of the same spot five days earlier showed it had appeared between the 5th and 10th of March 2014. The plane disappeared on March 8.

The GeoResonance search team scanned the ocean floor for metals found in commercial planes. This image shows the results for aluminium (left) and titanium (right) The scan showed metal deposits consistent with a large plane. This second image shows the results for copper (left) and engine alloys (right) This image shows the results for hydrocarbons (left) and steel alloys (right). All six scans came from the same location, 118 miles off the coast of Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal 'The company is not declaring this is MH370, however it should be investigated,' GeoResonance said in a statement. The company's director, David Pope, said he only went public with the information after he felt the authorities were disregarding it. 'We're a large group of scientists, and we were being ignored, and we thought we had a moral obligation to get our findings to the authorities,' he told CNN today. GeoResonance typically uses remote sensing technology to look for oil, gas and mineral deposits.

The news comes as international search teams gathered in Perth digest the news that the hope of finding any floating debris has all-but vanished, with any pieces of MH370 likely to have sunk to the ocean floor.



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An Australian company claims it may have found missing MH370, but the body responsible for coordinating the search has dismissed their findings. Pictured, international and Australian air crews involved in the search for missing Malaysia Airlines plane MH370 prepare for a photograph at the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) Pierce Base in Bullsbrook, near Perth today

Air crew members from China, Malaysia and Japan involved in the search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370. The chance of finding floating debris from a missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner has become highly unlikely, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said yesterday

It used the same technology to look for chemical elements in aircraft, such as aluminum, titanium and jet fuel residue.

The company, which uses its technology to excite the nucleii of a specific atom in order to detect it, started searching for the plane on April 12 by initially trying to find aluminium - the most abundant metal used to build the 777 model.





GeoResonance claims it has found the wreckage of an aircraft in the Bay Bengal - thousands of miles from where authorities have focused their search

Once it detects aluminium it moves onto the next most abundant metal - titanium, followed by copper, steel alloys, then other materials - in order to narrow down the search.

Scanning 'multispectral images' taken from the air GeoResonance says it found an 'anomaly' in the Bay of Bengal.

However, the Joint Agency Coordination Centre, which is coordinating the multinational search, dismissed the claim.

'The Australian-led search is relying on information from satellite and other data to determine the missing aircraft's location,' the JACC said.

'The location specified by the GeoResonance report is not within the search arc derived from this data. The joint international team is satisfied that the final resting place of the missing aircraft is in the southerly portion of the search arc.'

The surface search for MH370 has been called off. The search for the missing plane will continue but enter a new phase, focusing on searching the ocean floor

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott (left) and Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston announced yesterday that the search for missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 would move to a new face as it is now 'highly unlikely' that wreckage will be foundo n the ocean's surface

Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Tuesday that China and Australia were aware of the announcement.

'Malaysia is working with its international partners to assess the credibility of this information,' a statement from his office said.



In what is seen as an admission that MH370 will never be found, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said yesterday that the surface search was being scaled back because it is 'highly unlikely' clues will be found on the surface of the Indian Ocean.

Instead, the search will enter a new phase with the focus on the ocean floor - despite there being no 'pings' from what was earlier hoped were the aircraft's black boxes.

Mr Abbott said that as the aircraft, which had 239 people on board, has been missing for 52 days, if there had been any debris from the aircraft it would have now sunk.

Japanese Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera (front, fourth from the right) poses for a photograph with officials and members of Japanese and Australian aircrews who participated in the search

'By this stage, 52 days into the search, most material would have become waterlogged and sunk' said Mr Abbott.

He paid tribute to the 'tremendous work' of air crews from eight nations who have contributed to the search.

His words were seen as virtually admitting that the search had little prospect of finding the aircraft, particularly as a concentrated hunt by the undersea search vehicle Bluefin-21 in a 'likely area' had found nothing.



Adding to the mystery is the testimony of sea current experts that anything that floats is likely to have washed up on rocks or a beach somewhere.

But nothing has turned up and air and sea searches have also failed to find even a slick of oil that could be linked to the missing plane if it had plunged into the sea.

Malaysia's Prime Minister, Mr Najib Razak, conceded in an interview that investigators had made no substantial progress since March 28 - the date experts calculated from satellite data the plane crashed into the Indian Ocean.

'That's all we have until today,' Mr Najib told the Wall Street Journal.

Royal Navy submarine HMS Tireless concluded its work searching for the black box of the missing plane on Friday Flying Officer Elizabeth Vonfister is pictured aboard the RAAF E-7A Wedgetail aircraft during the search for wreckage of MH370 Searchers for missing Flight MH370 face tough choices on how to proceed after almost seven fruitless weeks, with only a fraction of a deep-sea zone still left to be scanned

Earlier, the former Prime Minister of Malaysia, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, questioned whether MH370 had even crashed into the Indian Ocean - and he blamed manufacturer Boeing for its fate.

He also suggested the reason passengers and crew did not act to stop whatever was happening on the Boeing 777 aircraft after it had taken off from Kuala Lumpur was because they were 'somehow incapacitated.'

In an opinion piece, Dr Mahathir, who maintains a strong influence in Malaysia's ruling party, said there was no chance, as had been suggested, that the pilot had committed suicide.

'Even if the pilot wants to commit suicide, the co-pilot and the cabin crew would not allow him to do so without trying something,' said the former prime minister.

'But no-one, not even the passengers did anything.'

Dr Mahathir also questioned why no debris or oil slick from the plane has been found.

'Can it be that the plane remained intact on crashing and sank with no trace and no-one launching the lifeboat doors as we are told all these aircraft are equipped with?

'Can one believe this plane quietly floated down into the raging sea and sank conveniently in the deepest part of the Indian Ocean?'



He said it must have taken some effort if the pilot, Captain Zaharie Ahmad Shah, had disabled the plane's communication system.

'The co-pilot would notice and for his own life he would have tried to do something.'

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak (left) has conceded that no progress has been made in the search for the missing plane since the search began. (Right) Former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has claimed that the manufacturers of MH370, Boeing, are responsible for its disappearance



Dr Mahathir, 88, who was Prime Minister for 22 years, asked: 'Was he disabled? Were all the crew members and the passengers disabled?'

He expressed his sadness that staff of Malaysia Airlines were targeted by Chinese relatives of passengers in Beijing last week 'because they are blaming the wrong people.'

'The loss of the plane is due to the makers, Boeing. How can Boeing produce a plane that is so easily disabled?'

In an era where passenger planes can be tracked on mobile phones and spy satellites operated by some countries are able to photography and identify a single person on the ground, Boeing had to explain how all these methods of tracking the aircraft 'can be disabled, can fail.'

The former Prime Minister's controversial comments did not end there.

'Either Beoing technology is poor or it is not fail-safe.

'I would not like to fly in a Boeing aircraft unless Boeing can explain how all its systems can fail or be disabled.'

Boeing, he said in his blog post, must demonstrate how the communication system could be disabled.

The company, he added, 'must accept responsibility for building an aircraft that can disappear in mid-air so completely.'

Insisting that Malaysia Airlines were not to blame for the tragedy, he said it was standard practice that when a plane crashes, a team of experts would arrive at the scene soonest so as to find the cause of the crash

'Boeing and the authorities in the manufacturing country should be looking out for the plane.

'Maybe the plane type should be grounded. But Boeing has shown no interest and had said practically nothing.'

Responding to Dr Mahathir's comments, a Boeing spokesman told MailOnline: 'Our thoughts and deepest sympathies continue to be with the families and loved ones of those aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.



'Under the international protocols established for aviation accident investigations, Boeing continues to serve as a technical advisor to the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board, in support of the Malaysian authorities.'



Relatives of Chinese passengers onboard the Malaysia Airlines MH370 push through a police line to march to the Malaysian embassy in Beijing on Thursday Relatives of some of the Chinese passengers on board the Malaysia Airlines flight comfort each other on Friday as they continued their sit-in protest outside the Malaysian embassy in Beijing