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Debris found earlier this month off the southeast African coast, which some believe could be from the missing Malaysia Airlines flight, has arrived in Australia for testing, officials said on Monday, two years after the plane disappeared.
A white, metre-long chunk of metal was found off the coast of Mozambique this month by a US adventurer who has been carrying out an independent search for flight MH370.
Two pieces of debris will be examined by investigators from Australia and Malaysia, as well as specialists from Boeing, Geoscience Australia and the Australian National University in Canberra, Chester said.
Malaysian Transport Minister Liow Tiong Lai has said there is a “high possibility” the metal chunk belongs to a 777 jet, the same type of aircraft as MH370.
It is believed to have crashed in the Indian Ocean and an initial search of a 60,000 sq km area of seafloor has been extended by another 60,000.
A piece of the plane’s wing washed up on the French Indian Ocean island of Reunion, on the other side of Madagascar, in July 2015. So far only that piece, known as a flaperon, has been confirmed to belong to the missing plane.
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