Expectations are high among investigators who are hoping to unlock the mystery of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 as a piece of plane wreckage found on Reunion island arrived in Paris on Saturday for official analysis.
The two-metre, barnacle-encrusted chunk of metal wreckage which emerged from the sea on Wednesday has raised hopes of discovering what happened to the Kuala Lumpur-Beijing flight which mysteriously disappeared from radars on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board, The Guardian reported.
The two-metre, barnacle-encrusted chunk of metal wreckage which was discovered by beach cleaners on Wednesday has raised hopes of discovering what happened to the Kuala Lumpur-Beijing flight which mysteriously disappeared from radars on March 8, 2014, with 239 people on board, The Guardian reported.
The piece of wreckage - known as a flaperon or wing component - arrived at Paris' Orly earlier in the day on an Air France flight from the island of Reunion.
The flaperon will be taken to the southwestern city of Toulouse to a defence ministry laboratory where it will be analysed this Wednesday, the Paris prosecutor's office said in a statement.
Boeing on Friday said it will dispatch a team to assist in analysing the wreckage and investigators added they are confident the debris is from a 777 aircraft.
Boeing engineers have seen a part number -- 10-60754-1133 -- in photos of the component.
A Boeing parts supplier confirmed the number was on a seal associated with the Boeing 777, a source said.
Images of the debris appear to match schematic drawings for the right-wing flaperon from a 777.
Malaysia have also dispatched teams to Toulouse.
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