# MH370 Mystery: After 11 Years, Underwater Drone Reveals New Evidence

For over a decade, the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 has remained aviation’s greatest enigma. On March 8, 2014, the Boeing 777 vanished with 239 people aboard after taking off from Kuala Lumpur en route to Beijing.

Its transponder went silent, and the plane veered off course, last detected over the southern Indian Ocean. No distress call, no wreckage, just silence—until now. In 2025, after 11 years of fruitless searches, a breakthrough emerged with Ocean Infinity’s underwater drone mission uncovering potential evidence that could finally solve the mystery.

After 11 Years, Underwater Drone FINALLY REVEALED The Location Of Malaysian Flight MH370!

Initial searches spanned 4.5 million square kilometers across the Indian Ocean, costing over $150 million, yet yielded little beyond debris like a flapperon on Reunion Island in 2015.

These fragments hinted at a crash in the southern Indian Ocean, but the vast, deep terrain hid the main wreckage. Ocean Infinity, a Texas-based tech firm, reignited hope in 2018 with autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) capable of scanning depths up to 6,000 meters. Their “no find, no fee” mission, risking up to $70 million, used cutting-edge sonar and AI to map uncharted seabeds, though early attempts failed.

By 2024, Ocean Infinity returned with upgraded technology, including the Armada 78-06, a robotic command ship, and smarter AUVs equipped with side-scan, synthetic aperture, multi-beam, and sub-bottom profiler sonar.

Researchers' new claims could lead to missing flight MH370 finally being found

Guided by AI and ocean current simulations, they targeted a refined 40-nautical-mile zone near the Seahorse Zone, identified by aerospace engineer Richard Godfrey’s Weak Signal Propagation Reporter (WSPR) data. This radio signal analysis traced MH370’s final path through atmospheric disturbances, pinpointing a previously unscanned deep ravine.

In May 2025, their persistence paid off. An AUV detected sonar reflections of a long, flat object resembling a Boeing 777 wing, partially buried in sediment, alongside fragments suggesting a tail section and fuselage within a 15-kilometer radius.

The fan-shaped debris pattern indicated a high-speed impact, aligning with WSPR predictions. Though not publicly confirmed, behind-the-scenes preparations for retrieval using pressure-resistant submersibles signal cautious optimism. This discovery, driven by relentless human ingenuity and machine precision, marks a turning point after years of dead ends.

Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 - Latest news, features and stories on the missing flight

Yet, finding wreckage is only the beginning. Recovering the black boxes—flight data and cockpit voice recorders—from crushing depths poses immense challenges. After 11 years underwater, their condition is uncertain, and even if intact, they may not fully explain why MH370 veered off course, why its transponder was disabled, or what unfolded in the cockpit.

Theories of mechanical failure, hijacking, or pilot intent persist, but without data, closure remains elusive. As families await answers, this evidence proves no mystery stays unsolved forever. The next steps—retrieval and analysis—will determine if the silence of MH370 is finally broken, or if deeper questions linger beneath the waves.