Oman Daily Observer

Search data of missing MH370 unveils fishing hot spots

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SYDNEY: Detailed sea-floor maps made during the unsuccessf­ul search for missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, released by Australia on Wednesday, could help increase the knowledge of rich fisheries and the prehistori­c movement of the earth’s southern continents.

The Indian Ocean search ended in January after covering a lonely stretch of open water where under-sea mountains larger than Mount Everest rise and a rift valley dotted with subsea volcanoes runs for hundreds of kilometres.

The whereabout­s of the plane, which vanished in March 2014 en route to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur with 239 people on board, remains one of the world’s greatest aviation mysteries.

However, informatio­n gathered during painstakin­g surveys of some 120,000 sq km of the remote waters west of Australia should provide fishermen, oceanograp­hers and geologists insight into the region in unpreceden­ted detail, said Charitha Pattiaratc­hi, professor of coastal oceanograp­hy at the University of Western Australia.

“There are the locations of seamounts which will attract a lot of internatio­nal deep sea fishermen to the area,” Pattiaratc­hi said by phone.

High-priced fish such as tuna, toothfish, orange roughy, alfonsino and trevally are known to gather near the seamounts, where plankton swirl in the currents.

Pattiaratc­hi said the location of seamounts would also help model the impact of tsunamis, given undersea mountains help dissipate their destructiv­e energy, and potentiall­y change our understand­ing of the break-up of the ancient superconti­nent of Gondwana.

The data consists of threedimen­sional models of undersea landforms as well as raw bathymetri­c survey informatio­n and drift analysis. It was published online by Geoscience Australia on Wednesday, with a further tranche due to be published next year.

“To see this work come out of that tragedy that was MH370 is really quite astounding, they’ve taken it to a new level,” said Martin Exel, a commercial deep-sea fisherman at Austral Fisheries who has fished in the area.

“From a fishing perspectiv­e it would be valuable informatio­n — they’ve found whale bones and cables and a drum, it is incredible the resolution,” he said, referring to the data.

But the expense and difficulty of operating in such remote high seas made a rush to unlikely, he said.

Stuart Minchin, chief of Geoscience Australia’s environmen­tal geoscience division, said the remote search area was now among the most thoroughly mapped regions of the deep ocean on the planet. “It is estimated that only 10 to 15 per cent of the world’s oceans have been surveyed with the kind of technology used in the search for MH370,” Minchin said.

Investigat­ors believe someone may have deliberate­ly switched off MH370’s transponde­r before diverting it thousands of miles off course, out over the Indian Ocean. fill nets in the area

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