While the wreckage discovered may offer clues about why the Airbus A320 went down with 66 people on board nearly a month ago, its manufacturer said today the flight recorders held the key to unlocking the mystery.
"The first photos of the wreckage do not allow to establish any scenario of the accident," an Airbus statement said.
"Only the black boxes could contribute to a full understanding of the chain of events which led to this tragic accident."
The search vessel John Lethbridge, equipped with an underwater robot, arrived in Egypt last week to begin searching an area around 290 kilometres north of the Egyptian coast.
The robot discovered pieces of the fuselage at "several sites", the Egyptian board of inquiry said late yesterday.
A source close to the investigation told AFP that the robot, operated by Mauritius-based Deep Ocean Search, had found "small fragments" of the plane.
The "pings" emitted by the black boxes were detected by French survey ship Laplace on June 1 but the flight recorders' exact location has not yet been established.
The area where the plane crashed is believed to be about 3,000 metres deep and its flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder should have had enough battery power to emit signals for four to five weeks.
Investigators expect the signals to continue until June 24.
But the John Lethbridge has equipment capable of locating them even with no pings, according to the source close to the probe.
The flight data recorder gathers information about the speed, altitude and direction of the plane, while the cockpit voice recorder keeps track of conversations and other sounds in the pilots' cabin.
France's aviation safety agency has said the EgyptAir plane transmitted automated messages indicating smoke in the cabin and a fault in the flight control unit minutes before disappearing from radar screens.
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