Seventy Dutch and Australian police investigators were back for a second day to scour the wreckage strewn over some 20 square kilometres but members from the probe team hurriedly left a village where some debris was lying after mortar fire nearby.
"We heard at a distance of approximately two kilometres incoming artillery from where we were and that was too close to continue," said Alexander Hug, deputy chief monitor with the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) mission in Ukraine.
Government troops and rebels battling across the war-torn region had pledged to halt fighting around the rebel-held site of the downed Flight MH17 site and Hug said the visit to the village of Petropavlivka had been agreed with both sides.
Closer to the main impact site, Dutch police experts said they managed to recover an unspecified number of remains after deploying two sniffer dogs to help comb through the fields of debris, over two weeks after the plane was shot down killing all 298 people on board.
The United States accuses insurgents of blowing the airliner out of the sky with a surface-to-air missile likely supplied by Russia, while Moscow and the rebels have pointed the finger at the Ukrainian military.
More than 220 coffins have already been sent back to the Netherlands, which lost 193 citizens in the July 17 crash, but more body fragments remain lying out in the cornfields where the plane came down.
Across the rest of the region the violence that has claimed some 1,150 lives since mid-April raged on.
Ukraine's military said its positions continued to come under heavy fire and that separatists had hit an army drone with a missile similar to the one they say downed MH17.
No new casualties were reported though since an ambush overnight Thursday in a town 25 kilometres from the crash site left 14 people dead, including at least 10 soldiers.
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