Tuesday, August 27, 2024 In what could be a groundbreaking revelation in the ongoing mystery of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, Australian scientist Vincent Lyne claims to have discovered the “perfect hiding place” for the missing plane, which disappeared nearly a decade ago. Lyne, an adjunct researcher at the University of Tasmania, has put forward a theory that the plane was deliberately plunged into a deep “hole” in the Broken Ridge, an oceanic plateau located in the south-eastern Indian Ocean. Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 vanished on March 8, 2014, while en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

The Boeing 777-200ER, carrying 239 passengers and crew members, lost contact with air traffic control over Vietnamese airspace and subsequently disappeared from radar. Despite extensive international search efforts, the aircraft’s precise location has remained elusive, making it one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history. Over the years, several theories have emerged about the fate of MH370, ranging from mechanical failure to pilot suicide.

However, none have been conclusively proven. The disappearance has led to two major search operations in the southern Indian Ocean, which ultimately failed to yield significant results. To date, only a few pieces of debris confirmed to be from MH370 have been recovered from various locations, mostly along the African coast and Indian Ocean islands.

Vincent Lyne’s theory adds a new dimension to the MH370 mystery. According to h.