Flight Lt. Jason Nichols on board a Royal Australian Air Force AP-3C Orion, takes notes as they search for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 in southern Indian Ocean, Australia, Saturday, March 22, 2014.
Rob Griffith, Pool/AP Photo
Missing Malaysia Airlines Jet : French Satellite 'Radar Echoes' May Have Found Debris -New satellite data from the French found objects that could be related to missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, the French Foreign Ministry confirmed today.
Satellite radar echoes "identified some debris that could be from the Malaysia Airlines plane," French Foreign Ministry spokesman Romain Nadal told the Associated Press.
The echoes, which can be converted into black-and-white images, do not have the same “definition like a photograph, but they do allow us to identify the nature of an object and to localize it," Nadal said.
They were picked up in the same area where earlier satellite images from China and Australia showed what could possibly be parts of the missing plane.
Australian Maritime Safety Authority
This second map shows the possible objects in the map above PLUS the location of the possible objects spotted by the Chinese satellite on March 18, 2014. You can see that the object spotted by the Chinese satellite was with the area search on Saturday, March 22, 2014.
A statement issued today by Malaysian authorities, which described the data as satellite images, said the information was relayed to the Australian Maritime Safety Authority's rescue coordination center, but Australian search teams said they didn't find anything related to the missing jet during today's search.
Searchers had returned to the waters and the skies above the Indian Ocean, hoping to find any trace of a pallet or a large object captured by a Chinese satellite that could be from the flight.
"Our plan is to continue seeking -- to make sightings from the visual search, looking for the objects identified in the satellite imagery," John Young, with the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, said today.
The pallet, surrounded by several other objects including what appeared to be strapping belts of different colors, was spotted by a civilian search plane Saturday, but has not been closely examined, Mike Barton, chief of Australian Maritime Safety Authority's rescue coordination center, told reporters in Canberra, Australia.
Joshua Paul/AP PHOTO
Malaysian Defense Minister Hishammuddin Hussein, center, shows a note from Chinese Ambassador to Malaysia Huang Huikang stating that they received a recent satellite image during a search of the missing Malaysia Airlines, flight MH370, half way through a press conference at a hotel in Sepang, Malaysia, Saturday, March 22, 2014.
Wooden pallets are commonly used in shipping, but can also be used in cargo containers carried on planes.
"It's still too early to be definite, but obviously, we have now had a number of very credible leads and there is increasing hope, no more than hope, no more than hope, that we might be on the road to discovering what did happen to this ill-fated aircraft," Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said.
The search for any trace of the plane that vanished March 8 with 239 people on board continued as a senior U.S. official told ABC News that American investigators have settled on three primary theories to explain the disappearance
This article originally appeared in : Missing Malaysia Airlines Jet: French Satellite 'Radar Echoes' May Have Found Debris | By ABC News via Good Morning America | March 23, 2014
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