(CNN) -- The missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 is more likely to be in the southern search area identified by investigators, which stretches far into the Indian Ocean, a U.S. government official familiar with the investigation told CNN on Wednesday.
"This is an area out of
normal shipping lanes, out of any commercial flight patterns, with few
fishing boats and there are no islands," the official said, warning that
the search could well last "weeks and not days."
The search for the
passenger jet and the 239 people on board is now in its 12th day,
covering a total area roughly the size of the continental United States.
Searchers from 26
countries are trying to pinpointing the plane's location somewhere along
two vast arcs, one stretching deep into the Asian landmass, the other
far out into the Indian Ocean.
Malaysian Transport
Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said at a news conference Wednesday that
both search areas are of equal importance.
Here are other highlights from the news conference:
-- Some data had been
deleted from the flight simulator found at the home of the pilot,
Hishammuddin said. Forensic work is under way to try to recover it, he
said.
-- Malaysian authorities
have received background information from all countries with passengers
on board the plane except Russia and Ukraine. So far, no information of
significance has been found about any passengers, Hishammuddin said.
-- Malaysia has received
some radar data from other countries, he said, but "we are not at
liberty to release information from other countries."
-- Reports that the
plane was sighted by people in the Maldives are "not true," Hishammuddin
said, citing the Chief of the Malaysian Defense Force who contacted his
counterpart in the Maldives.
Ticking clock
The latest news conference took place as the clock ticked on search efforts.
The box containing the
flight-data and cockpit-voice recorders of the missing plane has
batteries designed to keep it sending out pings for 30 days. That leaves
18 days until the batteries are expected to run out.
Investigators hope the
recorders may reveal vital information about why the passenger jet
carrying 239 people veered dramatically off course and disappeared from
radar screens. But they have to find them first.
"The odds of finding the
pinger are very slim," said Rob McCallum, an ocean search specialist.
"Even when you know roughly where the target is, it can be very tricky
to find the pinger. They have a very limited range."
Technology put to use
Some of the nations
involved in the hunt are deploying an impressive array of technology,
including satellites and high-tech submarine-hunting planes, as they try
to narrow the search area.
They're also trawling through existing radar and satellite data for clues.
Australia said Wednesday
that the area of the southern Indian Ocean where it is searching for
the plane has been "significantly refined."
The new area is based on
work done by the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board on "the fuel
reserves of the aircraft and how far it could have flown," said John
Young of the Australian Maritime Safety Authority.
But Australian ships and aircraft have so far seen nothing connected to the missing plane, Australian authorities said.
Small details emerge
Much of what has emerged
in recent days has filled in a few more details about the early part of
the missing Boeing 777-200's flight.
But clear information on
what went on in the cockpit and where exactly the errant jet went after
it vanished from Malaysian military radar remains frustratingly
elusive.
On Tuesday, for example,
a law enforcement official told CNN that the aircraft's first major
change of course was almost certainly programmed by somebody in the
cockpit. The change was entered into the plane's system at least 12
minutes before a person in the cockpit, believed to be the co-pilot,
signed off to air traffic controllers.
But that disclosure only left more questions about the reason behind the reprogrammed flight path.
Some experts said the
change in direction could have been part of an alternate flight plan
programmed in advance in case of emergency; others suggested it could
show something more nefarious was afoot.
And Hishammuddin said
Wednesday that "there is no additional waypoint on MH370's documented
flight plan, which depicts normal routing all the way to Beijing."
The Thai military,
meanwhile, said it had spotted the plane turning west toward the Strait
of Malacca early on March 8. That supports the analysis of Malaysian
military radar that has the plane flying out over the Strait of Malacca
and into the Indian Ocean.
But it didn't make it
any clearer where the plane went next. Authorities say information from
satellites suggests the plane kept flying for about six hours after it
was last detected by Malaysian military radar.
Who was at the controls?
Malaysian authorities,
who are coordinating the search, say the available evidence suggests the
missing plane flew off course in a deliberate act by someone who knew
what they were doing.
Figuring out who that might be has so far left investigators stumped.
Particular attention has
focused on the pilot and first officer on Flight 370, but authorities
are yet to come up with any evidence explaining why either of them would
have taken the jetliner off course.
And some experts have warned against hastily jumping to conclusions about the role of the pilots.
"I've worked on many
cases were the pilots were suspect, and it turned out to be a mechanical
and horrible problem," said Mary Schiavo, a CNN aviation analyst and
former inspector general for the U.S. Department of Transportation. "And
I have a saying myself: Sometimes an erratic flight path is heroism,
not terrorism
China says it has found
nothing suspicious during background checks on its citizens on the
flight -- a large majority of the plane's passengers.
Searchers face deep ocean
Hishammuddin, the
country's public face of the search efforts, has repeatedly said at news
conferences that little is likely to be established about the
mysterious flight until the plane is found.
But in the Indian Ocean,
where Australia and Indonesia have taken the lead in the hunt, some of
the depths searchers are dealing with are significant.
The Bay of Bengal, for
example, which lies between Myanmar and India, has depths of between
about 4,000 and 7,000 meters (13,000 feet and 23,000 feet), according to
McCallum.
Wreckage and bodies of
passengers from Air France Flight 447, which crashed into the Atlantic
Ocean in 2009, were found at depths of around 12,000 feet by unmanned
submarines.
It took four searches
over the course of nearly two years to locate the bulk of the wreckage
and the majority of the bodies of the 228 people on board Flight 447. It
took even longer to establish the cause of the disaster.
Right now, authorities don't even know for sure if the missing Malaysian plane crashed or landed -- or where.
CNN has talked to more
than half a dozen U.S. military and intelligence officials who emphasize
that while no one knows what happened to the plane, it is more logical
to conclude it crashed into the Indian Ocean
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