Hunt for MH370 is back on
The Malaysian government has done a deal with a US-based seabed survey company to renew the search for the missing plane.
The Malaysian government has done a deal with a US-based seabed survey company to renew the search for the missing plane.
Malaysia to announce that US company Ocean Infinity will resume the search for missing Malaysia Airlines flight 370.
The mandated 15-minute interval between tracking of commercial aircraft may not be frequent enough to narrow search areas.
The Australian Transport Safety Bureau has published its final 440-page report into the search for the missing plane.
Images near a supposed crash site show white objects that could be man-made in the sea.
MH370 mystery deepens as Australian woman whose husband was a passenger hits out at the Transport Minister.
New evidence has narrowed the likely MH370 crash site to two areas on the edge of the original search zone.
New evidence released by safety authorities may have determined the area in which MH370 vanished with 239 people aboard.
A US seabed exploration company has offered to take the financial risk of a renewed search for missing Flight MH370.
AI technologies and other advances could lead to a breakthrough that helps locate the wreckage of the ill-fated MH370.
They look like visions from Game of Thrones — towering mountains, dramatic valleys, strings of volcanoes.
The ATSB says it may be another three months before it releases its report into Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.
Malcolm Turnbull has taken up the cause of the Australian families of MH370 victims with his Malaysian counterpart.
Malcolm Turnbull says Australia stands ready to do ‘everything it can’ to resume the search for missing flight MH370.
Australian Transport Safety Bureau chief Greg Hood has declined to release key documents on the search for MH370.
The southern Indian Ocean could see a rush of maritime bounty hunters probing the depths for the wreckage of MH370.
Australian authorities have launched the first salvo in an expected campaign to persuade Malaysia to resume the hunt.
Drift modelling research confirms view that Malaysia Airlines wreckage lies in a proposed new search area.
The refusal of authorities to release documents on the MH370 search makes them ‘look more guilty’ of a cover-up.
The Australian Transport Safety Bureau has invoked draconian legislation in refusing to release material on its hunt.
The debate over the biggest aviation mystery this century will be fought out in a US courtroom.
A series of catastrophic electrical and other failures may have led to the crash of MH370 according to a US lawsuit.
Australian officials refuse to release documents on flight MH370 because it ‘could damage international ties’.
Why did it insist on assuming that no pilot was in control?
On Wednesday it’s three years since the flight disappeared so it’s timely to review the search. Was it unlucky or wrong?
Two globally respected aviation experts continue to point the finger at the captain of Flight MH370.
The leader of the underwater hunt for Flight MH370, Paul Kennedy, believes the aircraft can and will be found.
The Malaysian government has backtracked on its offer of a reward to private search teams looking for MH370.
Australian Transport Safety Bureau staff would have liked to keep searching, saying the plane was “highly likely” in defined area.
The Malaysian government has unexpectedly offered a possible reward if the MH370 aircraft is found.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/topics/mh370/page/4