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On MH370's 12th anniversary, a Kansas man proposes a new search area in the Indian Ocean based on a NASA-recorded carbon monoxide spike, suggesting the plane crashed in the deep Wharton Basin, 1,100 km east of Coral Bay, Western Australia, where the wreckage of the Boeing 777 with 239 people aboard remains undiscovered despite prior efforts.
On the 12th anniversary of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370’s disappearance, Kansas businessman Randy Rolston proposes a new search area in the Indian Ocean based on a NASA-recorded carbon monoxide spike on March 8, 2014, suggesting the plane may have crashed in the deep Wharton Basin, about 1,100 km east of Coral Bay, Western Australia.
His 19-page analysis argues the spike could indicate the aircraft’s final moments and that the region, previously overlooked, may hold the wreckage of the Boeing 777 with 239 people aboard.
Despite extensive searches, including a 2025 private effort, the main wreckage remains undiscovered.
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En el 12o aniversario de MH370, un hombre de Kansas propone una nueva área de búsqueda en el Océano Índico basada en un pico de monóxido de carbono registrado por la NASA, lo que sugiere que el avión se estrelló en la profunda cuenca de Wharton, a 1.100 km al este de Coral Bay, Australia Occidental, donde los restos del Boeing 777 con 239 personas a bordo siguen sin ser descubiertos a pesar de los esfuerzos previos.