Excuse me, mate, it seems like someone's cooking up a storm with the MH370 mystery! Ten years have passed since Flight MH370 vanished without a trace over the Indian Ocean, and now, an Aussie researcher, Vincent Lyne, reckons he's cracked the case. He claims our missing chum is hiding at a depth of 6,000 meters in a sweet spot, a chasm in the southern Indian Ocean known as Broken Ridge.
After sinking his teeth into the case for over two years, Lyne's jaw-dropping discovery's going to grace the pages of a reputable journal, "Journal of Navigation." According to him, the cat's finally out of the bag with science solving the MH370 enigma.
On March 8, 2014, Malaysian Airlines' Boeing 777 with 239 passengers took off from Kuala Lumpur, bound for Beijing. It wasn't long before the plane swerved off course and disappeared into thin air over the Indian Ocean. All we've found since then are a few debris fragments, but no one's managed to find the needle in the haystack - the crash site.
Months passed, and theories began to swirl like a sandstorm. Some suggested a "Sully"-like emergency landing was to blame. Lyne believes he's found it and thinks his coordinates slot in perfectly with a route discovered on the pilot's home simulator. The FBI dismissed it as "irrelevant," but what do they know, eh?
The southern Indian Ocean - rugged, dangerous, and a favorite among deep-sea explorers. It's a place where planes vanish without a trace, only to be discovered years later, covered in barnacles and seaweed. If Lyne's theory is on, it could open a whole can of worms.
But what about fuel depletion? Lyne's doing his best to debunk that idea. He's had a good look over the debris fragments, and what he's found suggests that pilot Zaharie Shah made an emergency landing in the middle of the Indian Ocean. No, not like "Sully" on the Hudson River, but it's kind of noteworthy, right?
The thing is, we're still puzzling over why MH370 made an emergency landing in the middle of nowhere. It's one of those 'whodunit' mysteries that keeps us all guessing.
The oceans - especially the southern Indian Ocean - have a lot to answer for when it comes to the MH370 disaster. And with our man Lyne's got his eyes on that 6,000-meter deep chasm like a hound on a scent, who knows, we might finally uncover the truth.