Malaysia Airlines (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2023
  • With today’s technology, how can we lose a jetliner with 239 people on board? MH370: inside the longest, most costly search in aviation history.
    ➡ Subscribe: bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe
    ➡ Get more Nat Geo Full Episodes: • National Geographic Fu...
    ➡ Get more Nat Geo Wild Full Episodes: • Shark vs. Tuna (Full E...
    And check out more National Geographic series and specials here:
    ➡ Disney Plus: on.natgeo.com/3q6on5p
    ➡ Hulu: www.hulu.com/welcome
    ➡ NGTV app: www.nationalgeographic.com/tv/
    ➡ ABC app: abc.com/
    #FullEpisode #DraintheOceans #NationalGeographic
    Get More National Geographic:
    Official Site: bit.ly/NatGeoOfficialSite
    Facebook: bit.ly/FBNatGeo
    Twitter: bit.ly/NatGeoTwitter
    Instagram: bit.ly/NatGeoInsta
    TikTok: / natgeo
    Tenor: on.natgeo.com/31b3Koc
    About National Geographic:
    National Geographic is the world's premium destination for science, exploration, and adventure. Through their world-class scientists, photographers, journalists, and filmmakers, Nat Geo gets you closer to the stories that matter and past the edge of what's possible.
    Malaysia Airlines (Full Episode) | Drain the Oceans
    • Malaysia Airlines (Ful...
    National Geographic
    / natgeo
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 3,9 тыс.

  • @Metalhorse_
    @Metalhorse_ Год назад +5620

    It's disappointing how we could find habitable exoplanets, and ice on planets trillions of kms away..yet we can't find a plane that's gone missing over our waters.

    • @deli8871
      @deli8871 Год назад +263

      true, so weird how this works

    • @WojciechowskaAnna
      @WojciechowskaAnna Год назад +138

      @@akka8588 because its easier

    • @poey8824
      @poey8824 Год назад +636

      @@akka8588 Its a lot easier to photograph Pluto because we know exactly where its at. This plane is like finding a needle in a haystack. A massive haystack, that cant be explored without huge struggles. Also its pitch black down there.

    • @akka8588
      @akka8588 Год назад +117

      @@poey8824 okay fair enough, it's just so frustrating though when we can do all of this other stuff yet can't find things like this when we actually need to find them so we can try and prevent another event like this.
      Edit: Okay after some feedback, me getting my frustration out, and thinking logically, I understand why it's so difficult to locate missing aircraft in open waters.

    • @boostedctr5173
      @boostedctr5173 Год назад +61

      Over 400kph I don’t think anything is left it disintegrated

  • @m.o.bentertainment8582
    @m.o.bentertainment8582 Год назад +2651

    When I flew from Dubai to Perth and the plane left the Arabian peninsula all I could see was ocean, I fell asleep and woke up and we were still flying over the ocean. I saw a tiny speck floating in the ocean and then quickly realised it was one of those massive oil tankers but I could hardly see it. The vastness of the ocean is immense.

    • @cantfindmykeys
      @cantfindmykeys Год назад +175

      ..and it's a scary realization how far above the water (or land) you are flying. I've flown many of those long flights from the middle east over the vast ocean and it makes me feel like a speck of dust.

    • @Arab-nazi
      @Arab-nazi Год назад +16

      Great

    • @montalentjeanalain2391
      @montalentjeanalain2391 Год назад +39

      I am from one of the Indean ocean island..Mauritius

    • @sowmitriswamy6718
      @sowmitriswamy6718 Год назад +13

      Actually there is plenty of land mass on the Dubai - Perth route. There is south Asia, the Malay Peninsula, the Indonesian archipelago and then mainland Australia.

    • @cantfindmykeys
      @cantfindmykeys Год назад +13

      @@sowmitriswamy6718 yes, and it's still very very far down to the surface of the earth. Be it land or water.

  • @lonael6699
    @lonael6699 Год назад +693

    This is way better than Netflix's documentary about this tragedy. It's informative, very articulated, and based on facts and scientific research. Whereas Netflix's is more of a show than a documentary, it was heavily based on theories and speculations.

    • @Porumb
      @Porumb Год назад +55

      Yeah, I didn't enjoy the netflix doc at all, too many theories of conspiracy

    • @maroru7577
      @maroru7577 Год назад +42

      Netflix focus more on conspiracy theories. This one makes more sense.

    • @KmiiVC
      @KmiiVC Год назад +3

      absolutely agree

    • @mariaoconnor3740
      @mariaoconnor3740 Год назад +42

      That mad theory that Russians hijacked the plane made me want to turn that documentary off, it was such a ridiculous theory

    • @CATSWITHKYLA
      @CATSWITHKYLA Год назад +11

      That is all we have to go by is theories and speculations, since we have no idea what happened. I think the Netflix one was OK

  • @andrethompson2034
    @andrethompson2034 Год назад +846

    Spending five years in the Navy I realized just how big the ocean is. I've sailed the Atlantic and Indian Ocean and they're huge. It's a miracle that they found the Titanic due to the vastness of the ocean.

    • @sabsterblaster
      @sabsterblaster Год назад +121

      Before the Titanic sank it sent out it's exact coordinates. That helps...

    • @andrethompson2034
      @andrethompson2034 Год назад +153

      @anonymous yes that helped but it still took 73 years to find it.

    • @danmulholland1634
      @danmulholland1634 Год назад +20

      To find MH 370 with less military or government support it will take longer then should may be even by accident it will be found but with all the technology then and now it will very likely be found one day maybe within the next 10 year's never know

    • @hititman1524
      @hititman1524 11 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@danmulholland1634 Ocean ifinity may start a research in summer or next year

    • @macpaul777
      @macpaul777 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@hititman1524did they say something like that

  • @leeraxd
    @leeraxd Год назад +3043

    I've been following this since the day it happened. I know most of us are mostly just curious because this is the biggest aviation mystery of all time, but just a reminder of how tragic and sad this incident is. When the footage of the families wailing and crying come on, it absolutely breaks my heart. I cannot imagine being the family members in this. 230 families, 10 years later, not having any closure whatsoever.

    • @sladjanasimic5486
      @sladjanasimic5486 Год назад +63

      @@quake3video ?????

    • @PNW_Adventures1
      @PNW_Adventures1 Год назад +59

      Many important scientist on board. They all died

    • @Bob31415
      @Bob31415 Год назад +16

      @@quake3video It has been nine years.

    • @Bob31415
      @Bob31415 Год назад +41

      I completely agree. My heart aches for those family members. This is such a tragedy. After nine years the loss is still felt.

    • @larsvonrinpoche1229
      @larsvonrinpoche1229 Год назад +32

      @@quake3video yeah. Thanks for the answer to a question no one asked.

  • @Ramon_92
    @Ramon_92 Год назад +4508

    Its still mind blowing to me that almost 10 years later we still havent found that airplane....
    Shows you how incredibly large the open ocean really is .....
    *EDIT* Thanks for the likes !

    • @kevinmalone3210
      @kevinmalone3210 Год назад +260

      They didn't know where it flew to, just a general remote area. No coordinates to go to the location where this plane finally landed. It would be like finding a needle in a haystack.

    • @YourLocalDemocracy.Officer
      @YourLocalDemocracy.Officer Год назад +148

      imagine space wrecks in space, it'd be even harder to find a wreck

    • @kevinmalone3210
      @kevinmalone3210 Год назад +46

      @@YourLocalDemocracy.Officer perish that though, sounds like a nightmare, lol.

    • @sunway1374
      @sunway1374 Год назад +167

      Yes. The oceans are large. But also what exactly they are looking for? It's not likely that plane is in one piece or any large pieces. The plane could be smashed into relatively smaller pieces, then transported over a large area by ocean currents. There could be no wreckage to be found.

    • @sunway1374
      @sunway1374 Год назад +94

      @@kevinmalone3210 It's probably quite easy to find a needle in a haystack. Use a large magnet.

  • @Sanghalhriama_khiangte
    @Sanghalhriama_khiangte 5 дней назад +12

    In March 2014, on a Sunday morning between 5:00 a.m. and 5:30 a.m., several people spotted a flying object from a distance in different locations in Eastern Mizoram, Northeast India. They then saw the object fall from the sky. Although they spoke out about it, no one seemed concerned. On the same day, in the evening, the Malaysian Airlines Flight 370 incident was reported. While the world was searching for the plane at the bottom of the ocean, it's possible that the incident actually occurred in the region of Mizoram State, India, and the Myanmar border region.

  • @LovingCandyXOxo
    @LovingCandyXOxo 7 месяцев назад +113

    Why is no one talking about Blaine Gibson? Dude is considered an amateur and was the only one to actually start finding debris. Hats off to him!

    • @pearls1626
      @pearls1626 4 месяца назад +1

      That’s right

    • @woah2889
      @woah2889 Месяц назад +6

      He's highly sus, tbh

    • @momotaroed215
      @momotaroed215 Месяц назад

      The plane landed somewhere someone wanted to, cover it up by making a scapegoat, break some part of the plane and put it there as a evidence of plane debris that it wrecked into the ocean. It wasn't missing, but concealed, the information was shown only what they wanted to show, it's being controlled. That's why some people wasn't convinced that it couldn't be found, we're in 2024! Either found it or "they" concealed it.

  • @Scatpack-gw9kb
    @Scatpack-gw9kb Год назад +1544

    This incident has always intrigued me. I still remember where I was when I first heard the news about MH 370. I hope one day that we will find this wreck so the families can have closure.

    • @LilJollyJoker
      @LilJollyJoker Год назад +35

      Same! I was in 3rd grade when it occurred! Now in 12th!

    • @piyushkanthak1087
      @piyushkanthak1087 Год назад +7

      @@LilJollyJoker are you Indian?

    • @joyhanson8654
      @joyhanson8654 Год назад +7

      human error?

    • @angelamilton5134
      @angelamilton5134 Год назад +5

      I was having my bachelors thesis when I heard this news. I really hope the families get closure someday!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @LilJollyJoker
      @LilJollyJoker Год назад +8

      @@piyushkanthak1087 Why?

  • @unknowngba
    @unknowngba Год назад +624

    The MH 370 disappearance still gives me the chills. I have been following up with the latest findings since a decade. This incident gives me the terrifying vibes whenever I travel by air especially over the ocean.
    My prayers for the victims and their families 😢😢😢

    • @fadeaway6699
      @fadeaway6699 Год назад +2

      No bragging

    • @nadjahopetoerien2999
      @nadjahopetoerien2999 Год назад +6

      ​@@fadeaway6699 bragging? May i adk how is that bragging💀

    • @CATSWITHKYLA
      @CATSWITHKYLA Год назад +1

      The aliens took them to a better place. No worries 👍

    • @CATSWITHKYLA
      @CATSWITHKYLA Год назад +5

      ​@@fadeaway6699 why do you keep saying NO begging in every single comment thread?

    • @Collin2377
      @Collin2377 Год назад

      Unfortunately your useless prayers won’t help.

  • @williamdennis7652
    @williamdennis7652 11 месяцев назад +131

    The fact they left so many people with unanswered questions makes the loss so much more heartbreaking

  • @mobilegameplay3173
    @mobilegameplay3173 10 месяцев назад +26

    What's more overwhelming is other countries joining to contribute to give a hand together to find the airplane. Thank you very much we're very appreciate it.

  • @lesliechan31
    @lesliechan31 Год назад +348

    I will never stop being obsessed with this case. It's fascinating, and the families deserve answers for what happened to their loved ones.

    • @kadirkaanteespring6334
      @kadirkaanteespring6334 8 месяцев назад +1

      Me too I think if we use our new technologys mahbe we can find Mh 370

    • @davidwood1429
      @davidwood1429 4 месяца назад +3

      Same, I watched and will watch every single episode of any thing they have on this! I remember that day so well.

    • @Zooom88
      @Zooom88 4 месяца назад

      and rightfully so, it's the greatest aviation mystery ever. i've watched like 100s of documentary on this and never get tired of it once . it truly is a mystery

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf 3 месяца назад

      IDK if you are aware of another big airplane that went missing in the 20 th century, the only difference is that it was a cargo plane. It was never found, just like MH 370, so maybe we can say that we have a precedent and thus this is not the greatest aviation mistery?@@Zooom88

    • @joeschmoe21
      @joeschmoe21 3 месяца назад

      No mystery. The pilot was aiming for US Navy base in Diego Garcia. US Shot it down. But.... US killing 200+ civilians sounds ugly. So the charade of the 'search'.

  • @stussymishka
    @stussymishka Год назад +181

    the ocean draining simulations are so awesome

  • @SuzyQ334
    @SuzyQ334 10 месяцев назад +50

    This was one of the rare occasions when I was proud of the Australian government which spent a fortune and three years trying to find this plane (I'm not sure what the Malaysian government did to help find their missing plane and citizens). Interesting documentary. One day, I hope the families will get closure. Meanwhile, I wouldn't fly with that airline if they paid me.

    • @wrx2hot4u
      @wrx2hot4u 4 месяца назад +1

      exactly, wasted money on stupid misinfo.

    • @paulorocky
      @paulorocky 4 месяца назад

      I thought the Malaysian Government and MAS’s insurance was reimbursing us for it…

    • @johnwely
      @johnwely 4 месяца назад +1

      Susan, why didnt the over the horizon radar at Exmouth Australia not pick up the plane, that is very strange, but then again it is an American base.

  • @xemmyQ
    @xemmyQ Год назад +25

    thank you natgeo for not sensationalizing the tragedy. so many other "documentaries" and videos on the subject never go into the full detail of the search and always focus on some crazy conspiracy theory

    • @graced1446
      @graced1446 2 месяца назад +3

      *cough* netflix

  • @misterlianghui
    @misterlianghui Год назад +111

    The fact that we get free documentaries from National Geographic on RUclips is priceless .... keeping the education and knowledge alive. 🙏

    • @dianabeurman364
      @dianabeurman364 2 месяца назад +2

      ONE THING DECENT RUclips DOES.

    • @sk4u207
      @sk4u207 6 часов назад

      @@dianabeurman364 Yes

  • @matgeezer2094
    @matgeezer2094 Год назад +849

    MH370 One of the strangest plane disasters any of us have seen. I feel so sorry for the families who've lost loved ones

    • @Overlordtgk30
      @Overlordtgk30 Год назад +5

      I feel sorry for the 160 million dollars spend

    • @Subawoo123
      @Subawoo123 Год назад +95

      @@Overlordtgk30 you feel sorry for green pieces of paper? Interesting priorities you have there.

    • @flow2tech
      @flow2tech Год назад +2

      @@Subawoo123 😆

    • @dannicatzer305
      @dannicatzer305 Год назад +30

      Nothing strange about it, only its absence.. Clearly the pilot for whatever reason flew into the middle of nowhere on a suicide mission.. I'm sure many in the Malaysian government or military know exactly his motives but choose to remain silent..

    • @matgeezer2094
      @matgeezer2094 Год назад +10

      @@dannicatzer305 that does seem the most likely cause, still..... Also I'm skeptical of grand conspiracy ideas, especially without evidence.

  • @iamtharunraj
    @iamtharunraj 7 месяцев назад +30

    The best documentary on this incident yet. The narration is clear and exciting at the same time. Thanks to NGC for providing these for free.
    *Edit: It marks today, 10 years on 8th March, 2024. My prayers to the family of the people* 🙏🙏🙏

    • @SkyGodHQ
      @SkyGodHQ 5 месяцев назад +2

      NatGeo has years of experience on making air crashes investigation. They always make the best documentary. I wish NatGeo stays for a long time.

  • @samchat1
    @samchat1 11 месяцев назад +13

    Just brilliant. Simply the most informative with the current technologies for ocean hunt in an uncharted area. Drain the ocean simulation with the support of satellite radar data on ocean waves mapping sub surface terrain is just mind boggling.
    About MH 370, the French military satellite finds and images on debris are certainly an exciting lead, but exhausted.
    A really well made documentary, without any frill and flab, with only raw data.

  • @conniegnesda9720
    @conniegnesda9720 Год назад +65

    The ocean floor is full of sadness and haunting stories.

  • @SheaAuBri
    @SheaAuBri Год назад +635

    This is one of the best documentaries I have watched on MH370. I love the scientific and technological side more so than the drama, even though that’s interesting too. This episode put A LOT MORE INTO PROSPECTIVE! That plane was definitely flown into the ocean so it could take forever to be found! It will be found as technology, time and effort progresses!
    RIP TO THE VICTIMS & MY HEART GOES TO THE FAMILIES 💔

    • @cococourtney7239
      @cococourtney7239 Год назад +6

      AMEN 🙏 ❤️

    • @shecandance9500
      @shecandance9500 Год назад +13

      National Geographic produces the best documentary’s! They are thorough with scientific and technological info and experts! I suggest watching more of them! They are truly fascinating! RIP to the victims and families of MH370!

    • @marallenrondez2606
      @marallenrondez2606 10 месяцев назад +6

      So much better than the Netflix docuseries!!

    • @allergictohumansnotanimals5671
      @allergictohumansnotanimals5671 10 месяцев назад +2

      i just wanna know what caused the plane to turn around and go all the way south to the indian ocean

    • @ryndrssn
      @ryndrssn 9 месяцев назад +3

      Have you watched Lemmino's? His is top notch, far less budget than NatGeo but done like it

  • @user-wj7dl7lj8v
    @user-wj7dl7lj8v Месяц назад +8

    I got a Malaysian airlines flight ad while watching this

  • @wilson5377
    @wilson5377 11 месяцев назад +63

    Thanks to National Geographic for sharing this series with us.✌
    R.I.P.
    to the passengers
    who went down with
    Malaysian MH370
    and Air France 447.💐🙏

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf 3 месяца назад

      You never know, they may have gone up after being abducted by aliens. Maybe they are throwing an eternal party on some planet. Who knows.

  • @jackstatter7497
    @jackstatter7497 Год назад +872

    The fact that this plane had been missing for nearly a decade is fascinating to say the least.

    • @lisatarr3078
      @lisatarr3078 Год назад +3

      Talk to freescale about it

    • @janakjodhan7982
      @janakjodhan7982 Год назад +14

      Disturbing!

    • @danmulholland1634
      @danmulholland1634 Год назад

      Likey we will find the remains of the plane one day I mean we are advancing in so many ways we have so much radars amd waya to track stuff it's not even funny were even almost ready to cure infertility (IVG) and bring back the Mammoth and he's been extinct for thousands of years I can't wait to see what the next 20 year's will be like

    • @lisatarr3078
      @lisatarr3078 Год назад +4

      I believe it was shot down over that "secret air base" near the Maldives,but who 's to say!

    • @tppdc1495
      @tppdc1495 Год назад +3

      Many hundreds of planes lost were never found.

  • @SapphireMyst201
    @SapphireMyst201 Год назад +391

    I remember helping with the online volunteers combing through satellite photos of so much ocean trying to find signs wreckage or the life vests/escape slides/rafts. Hope it is found one day so these families can have some closure ❤️

    • @Goodzillla1066
      @Goodzillla1066 Год назад +23

      If only Google could figure out a way to map the ocean beds 🌊

    • @alexandernico8930
      @alexandernico8930 Год назад +2

      @@Goodzillla1066 exactly

    • @hellonomasonto
      @hellonomasonto Год назад +1

      @@Goodzillla1066 That's such a fascinating thought 🤔.

    • @nmstranger
      @nmstranger Год назад +6

      @@Goodzillla1066 they probably can BUT not at the resolution needed to see something as small as plane

    • @petermuller5800
      @petermuller5800 Год назад +20

      @@nmstranger No satellite can see through 4.000m of ocean depth. The plane wreckage is in pieces on the ocean floor, not elevated enough to have any effect on the water & to be spotted from space.

  • @henrysantos121
    @henrysantos121 10 месяцев назад +3

    *I really love watching this type of documentary*

  • @Nikki_Catnip
    @Nikki_Catnip Год назад +39

    I’ve followed this since the start. I hope people don’t stop till it’s found out what happened to the best of our ability. Those families deserve answers.

  • @maan17885
    @maan17885 Год назад +266

    It's so tragic but this documentary is so good. We often never get to know what happens in the aftermath of a tragedy like this. News cycles get on so fast that we barely have time to fully comprehend the magnitude of an event like this. Major kudos to all the crew and people that have worked tirelessly to find the plane. I hope they find it and the families get some closure. Well done also to National Geographic for this documentary.

  • @jjramos46
    @jjramos46 Год назад +84

    To me its amazing how old and antiquated the black box tech still is. Something so important should be made to make itself much easier to find.

    • @bethanywhite877
      @bethanywhite877 Год назад +16

      I agree. Very primitive to me. Especially for hearing pilot conversations. They should never be allowed to turn those off from the plane. Seems the black box would be back up. We should never need a black box for cockpit conversations.

    • @littlebanshee
      @littlebanshee 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@bethanywhite877 yes this should be resolved right away and made to where the black box cannot be messed with in any way. I’d like to know why they allow them to turn them off at all.

    • @Nightdreaux22647
      @Nightdreaux22647 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@littlebanshee I wonder why Boeing didn't want to fund new project and concept of storing flight information and cockpit recordings, like uploading the data on the internet and will always be refreshed and active to store information 24/7. Storing information on a physical box that has high potential to be lost in time like BlackBox is old tech and outdated. They need to directly connect airplane data into the internet via satellite transfer, clouding computing, and servers across nearby countries.

  • @riennekoh3901
    @riennekoh3901 10 месяцев назад +6

    Thank you for this video that focuses on factual leads and investigation rather than speculation. A pity that after all the enormous efforts spent, the plane still wasn't found.

  • @Bob31415
    @Bob31415 4 месяца назад +1

    Very well made and informative documentary. Thank you National Geographic.

  • @henryhenrywang5333
    @henryhenrywang5333 Год назад +172

    In Beijing International Airport T3 overnight parking, there is Lexus 400 covered in thick dust is waiting her owner to pick her up, but the owner wouldn't be back, the owner was on MH370. Sad.

    • @AaronShenghao
      @AaronShenghao Год назад +42

      There are several Porsche too, the airport management said they would wavier the parking fee if they ever come back…

    • @S1lob0nMyKnob
      @S1lob0nMyKnob Год назад +6

      I'll take it no prob

    • @B2Dtwo
      @B2Dtwo Год назад +40

      Yes, also there's a lady's house in Singapore where the stack of mail outside her door has grown 7 meters high, waiting to be collected. The owner lived alone and was on MH370. Sad.

    • @sahajgupta9015
      @sahajgupta9015 Год назад +8

      Where can I see the car images?

    • @kristophmiller3841
      @kristophmiller3841 Год назад +3

      This comment really hit me

  • @Progressive.G
    @Progressive.G Год назад +461

    Rest in peace to all of the victims of the crash

    • @CadStr
      @CadStr Год назад +9

      Are you sure they crash? They could be entry in a worm hole going to other time

    • @jdubz6396
      @jdubz6396 Год назад +70

      @@CadStr Sorry, your LSD will wear off soon.

    • @CadStr
      @CadStr Год назад +3

      @@jdubz6396 The Langoliers from 1995

    • @renzofrecon3914
      @renzofrecon3914 Год назад +9

      @@jdubz6396 lmaooo

    • @hikingpainter
      @hikingpainter Год назад +3

      They may still be being probed. The answer may not lay at the bottom of the Indian Ocean. It may not be on earth

  • @CharlesNolanArt
    @CharlesNolanArt 6 месяцев назад +14

    Why were some countries unwilling to speak about this tragic plane. It breaks my heart for the families and loved ones who have endured so much from this. I think we all can agree that something is being withheld from all of us.

  • @kayrmet
    @kayrmet Год назад

    This is absolutely FASCINATING!!

  • @YouOnlyIiveTwice
    @YouOnlyIiveTwice Год назад +472

    The greatest mystery regarding this incident isn't even so much where it is, but why it happened to begin with. I imagine finding the airplane will be somewhat closure for all the victim's families, but I don't know if we will ever figure out conclusively why the pilot(s) deviated to fly into the middle of nowhere and pretty much intentionally making it very difficult to find the aircraft. It's all just very bizarre. I suppose the black box might reveal something, but that's assuming it can be retrieved and it wasn't destroyed.

    • @TheSilverIllusion
      @TheSilverIllusion Год назад

      Or that it even has readable information anymore. :( Which is very, very unlikely, given that it has already been 10 years. Even Air France 447's blackboxes were read out by pure luck. Don't even want to fathom what 10 years in deep water might do to the data.

    • @BeyondInvestigation
      @BeyondInvestigation Год назад +28

      The FDR and CVR unfortunately only record the last 2hrs of any incident (Of a flight that started 2 OR more hours before), according to Boeing regarding MH370 (which seems pretty archaic since the plane was built in 2002 and by then digital voice recorders were plentiful, reliable and cheap for a 24hr recorder)... That would give investigators the ability to hear if anyone is moving, talking, fighting or even breathing in the cockpit on the CVR. The FDR would have any and all instrumentation data including if anyone was manually doing anything or entering any way-points/destinations.... If a catastrophic incident happened just after the hand-off from Malaysia to Vietnam airspace, there would be no recorded record of what exactly happened instrumentation wise nor would there be any voice recordings of the cockpit crew.

    • @nessie43
      @nessie43 Год назад +48

      It was very carefully planned and i doubt the boxes would reveal anything. If everything else (almost) was shut off, they would be too.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 Год назад +9

      *victims' families
      Learn where to insert apostrophes.

    • @Think-dont-believe
      @Think-dont-believe Год назад +4

      @@nessie43 like that flight that had gas or altitude every person was unconscious they put fighters up and saw and it ran till out gas

  • @fliqgaming007
    @fliqgaming007 Год назад +56

    The Biggest Mystery of the Decade.. a horrific incident !!
    Thanks NG for the documentary 👍

  • @captainadit380
    @captainadit380 Год назад +3

    I was in class 1 when I heard abt this incident. That evening every news channel had headlines on this topic....Now,I am in 10th class,9 years have passed by but, as an avgeek ,it hits hard that 239 families still haven't yet got any answers regarding where there loved ones are..... Anyways,I thank all those who invested their time and money to unfold the mystery and at last......Our thoughts and condolences are with the family members and friends who lost their oved ones....
    RIP😥😥🙏🙏
    From INDIA

  • @2lipToo
    @2lipToo 10 месяцев назад +15

    It was amazing to see the terrain of two major oceans...wow and the wreckage of FR447, another crash that transfixed and terrified me. It's a disgrace that the Malaysian government announced that it will not continue searching. What an insult to injury this is to the families and humanity as a whole. We need to learn from this event. There are so many questions.

    • @marcobassini3576
      @marcobassini3576 4 месяца назад +2

      It is not an insult to injury, it is a wise decision of how to spend tax payers' money, especially in a country that certainly is not rich. Money spent to find the plane is money not available for, let us say, build or maintain an hospital, that for certain will help saving lives.

  • @slashit491
    @slashit491 Год назад +52

    Hats off the composer and the narrator of this programme.
    It was heart-wrenching. But the efforts the whole team behind the investigation was truly a massive expedition toward the mystery of our world!

  • @kamyagupta4030
    @kamyagupta4030 Год назад +33

    This is very well made....RIP to those who lost their lives....and condolences to their loved ones

  • @UrbanCraftTv
    @UrbanCraftTv 10 месяцев назад +6

    The ocean is incredibly an amazing creation.

  • @MichaelM-uw3mk
    @MichaelM-uw3mk 4 месяца назад +13

    I love how the underwater mountains show wind erosion. Genius.

  • @auvu8738
    @auvu8738 Год назад +69

    This is a great contribution to society; these documents are so informative and mind opening. I'm glad how the families are able to see the simulation of the last minutes of the plane before landing in the water as a closure.

    • @timothygeorgefay1
      @timothygeorgefay1 11 месяцев назад

      Hello Dau Vu,
      it's a great pleasure meeting you here, may God bless you and your family... How are you doing over there? And how are your business and family?

    • @kayongacelestin
      @kayongacelestin 9 месяцев назад

      😊😊

    • @Hugh-Janus69420
      @Hugh-Janus69420 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@timothygeorgefay1doing great. Thanks for asking, daddy

  • @deedeemccall7693
    @deedeemccall7693 Год назад +20

    I pray that one day the plane be found. It's terribly painful not knowing where your loved ones are. It leaves one without closure. May God bless their souls.

  • @Jeannette0890
    @Jeannette0890 Год назад +2

    Im so emotional watching this. These pilots look countless lives. RIP to all but them.

  • @veritas41photo
    @veritas41photo 4 месяца назад +42

    I think it is fairly obvious that the Captain pilot locked the First Officer out of the cockpit, and then committed deliberate suicide, at the same time murdering everyone else on board. Even if the black boxes were found, the How and What would be answered, but not the Why. Disgusting... and So Sad for the families of the victims.

    • @fiddlermargie
      @fiddlermargie 3 месяца назад +2

      Motive?

    • @sahazmarkk5624
      @sahazmarkk5624 2 месяца назад +3

      • If the Pilot locked the cockpit at Igari, it was not possible for him to disappear off radar without turning off ACARS navigation, because the switch to it in MH370 was outside the cockpit. So either both captain and FO were involved (no theory suggests involvement of FO Hamid) or neither of them.
      • According to the official narrative the last contact of ATC radar was Igari and then plane changed it's course but According to Kaula Lampur ATC as shown in recording it was Bitod (they repeated 3 times)which means the plane keep travelling in the plane path towards south china sea but Malaysia covered it up and said we don't know why KL ATC said that.
      • It is highly unlikely that plane went through primary radar of 2 country's airspace and neither of them noticed and deployed fighter jets.
      • In 2016 when official narrative was getting criticism and people were calling it an international coverup, all of a sudden Inmarsat which works under british government said thier satalite caught MH370 ACARS which was turned on later on again according to official narrative and showed arcs where plane possibly could go. they again tried to save the fake narrative.
      • Last of all, they tried to make narrative against captain's personal life. But according to his wife and daughter he'd never do such thing. Even if you hear him talk in recordings he sound like just another day at office, he was posting youtube tutorials of DIY fixes a year ago with his family, he had no suicidal tendencies and surely not psychopathic tendencies that would make him mastermind killing over 200 people by depressureizing, fooling ATC and Airforces to travel in middle of Indian ocean to crash the plane.
      Official narrative was most definately an international coverup to avoid Humiliation and maybe something bigger.

    • @fiddlermargie
      @fiddlermargie 2 месяца назад +1

      @@sahazmarkk5624I remember that the military radar tracked a primary target from near the last transponder hit moving west northwest until it went out of radar range. There was a major runway on that course, I think it was Phucket, that I thought he may have been headed for, but couldn't get the airplane down. Something major happened to the plane's systems, electrical failure certainly, most of the passengers probably died onboard at some point, and the pilot(s) also eventually succumbed. Perhaps a fire and/or decompression. No one will ever know for sure. I like to think the pilot, before dying himself, set a course into the ocean to avoid casualties on the ground. It did make another left turn after being lost on primary radar.

  • @rare748
    @rare748 Год назад +144

    I was 16 when this plane disappeared, at the time I really thought in a day or 2 they will find it I was so curious about where they would find it or what happened to it.I can't believe it's been 9 years and still no clue of its whereabouts.....so sad for the loved ones

    • @MsXBean
      @MsXBean Год назад +3

      Same dude

    • @nandaamaharajh
      @nandaamaharajh Год назад +1

      Same

    • @andyc9902
      @andyc9902 Год назад +8

      Time flies doesn't it.

    • @luntbanzi1967
      @luntbanzi1967 Год назад +4

      They know where the plane is my guy

    • @the_writer_lyff
      @the_writer_lyff Год назад +3

      Exactly same ,I came to knew it today while watching a documentary on Netflix about MH370 ,lots of theory explained with different angle but not exact theory explained...It's really sad for those who lost their life and those who still keep waiting for thier loved one....More power to them 🙏

  • @jibrilkateregga5408
    @jibrilkateregga5408 Год назад +25

    I'm so fascinated by the search efforts, and Tech used. The oceans are another world.

  • @miniki174
    @miniki174 10 месяцев назад

    i’m happy that everyone was working so hard for this case

  • @sapoardiente
    @sapoardiente 10 месяцев назад +1

    Me encantan este tipo de documentales. Muy interesante!

  • @kimvanderlinden1842
    @kimvanderlinden1842 Год назад +45

    The moment these families heard the news, I was absolutely disgusted by the amount of cameras in their faces.

  • @bluestar2253
    @bluestar2253 Год назад +429

    To say the malaysian military is grossly negligent for not responding to a foreign flying object on its military radar, is an understatement.

    • @brucewayne3602
      @brucewayne3602 Год назад +40

      absolutely ... Najib & his henchmen possess definite answers ... as well he fleeced the Malaysia people of millions - still he walks free in arrogance with defiance ... what kind of sham democracy is this ???

    • @markd6634
      @markd6634 Год назад +20

      They were loading their squirt guns that day.

    • @rogwarrior1018
      @rogwarrior1018 Год назад +39

      They didn't scramble the jets because they knew exactly what was going on. If you watch more videos you'll learn what the MG knew when it was actually happening.

    • @bluestar2253
      @bluestar2253 Год назад +20

      @@rogwarrior1018 Not surprised. The MG is one of the most corrupt in the world. Rest in peace to all the unfortunate passengers and crew members.

    • @brucewayne3602
      @brucewayne3602 Год назад +2

      @@rogwarrior1018 absolutely !!!

  • @honeydate
    @honeydate Год назад +3

    Imagine the mysteries this technology will unearth! Fascinating stuff!

  • @juliajs1752
    @juliajs1752 Год назад +10

    Somehow it is good to know that people went out to look for the plane and the victims, for a long time, over and over again. They weren't just brushed off and disregarded. People cared.

  • @sangboithiek1003
    @sangboithiek1003 Год назад +101

    This mystery of MH370 is truly horrifying and scary to say the least . Just thinking about it gives me goosebumps.
    From the moment they deviate,to when they lost signal and then even flying for hrs and hrs before they finally crash in the ocean(acc to the data/theory) is just mind-blowing.

    • @barbaracreel2777
      @barbaracreel2777 4 месяца назад

      It didnt crash into the ocean but flown into the ocean😢

  • @edvardasaleknavicius895
    @edvardasaleknavicius895 Год назад +262

    It is still so frustrating to me that almost $300m modern machine could simply vanish without a trace. RIP to all those on board...

    • @dennywidya
      @dennywidya Год назад +2

      There are do SOME TRACES

    • @theyouthblock8210
      @theyouthblock8210 Год назад +11

      Lives are priceless.

    • @mkandy81
      @mkandy81 Год назад +30

      It didn’t vanish without a trace. Parts have been found, it’s known it was a deliberate accident. The search area is just too large, and therefore too expensive to search

    • @quangminhnguyen2431
      @quangminhnguyen2431 Год назад

      Tony Abott (the former Australian PM who served when MH 370 gone missing) said that it’s almost certain that it’s deliberate and the Malaysian government has been hiding facts

    • @edvardasaleknavicius895
      @edvardasaleknavicius895 Год назад +19

      @@mkandy81 Its just mind boggling that such an expensive piece of machinery wasn't giving out accurate GPS data up until its last seconds. And such system wasn't made auxillary, without ability to disactivate.

  • @fragrantbloom
    @fragrantbloom Год назад

    Love this documentary

  • @whazzup8353
    @whazzup8353 Месяц назад +4

    the most important question to aircraft industries, why the flight transponder and gps system is allowed to have option ( to on /to off)? if this option is not allowed, i think we would have found the exact location of the aircraft without any difficulty. Perhaps the answer itself.

  • @huzefahabib2070
    @huzefahabib2070 Год назад +13

    I did not watch cartoons growing up, I used to watch documentaries on Nat geo and Discovery. And it is giving me an immense amount of pleasure to be able to watch my fav channel, uploading documentaries on youtube for foree.
    Thank you so much for making my childhood wonderful Nat geo.♥️

  • @jujuthaboss_
    @jujuthaboss_ Год назад +72

    Although I’ve been on many flights, even after the disappearance of this particular aircraft, it is this mystery that has spike my flight anxiety.

    • @cantfindmykeys
      @cantfindmykeys Год назад +16

      My aviophobia has less to do with planes disappearing and more to do with them crashing in the first place.

    • @littlebanshee
      @littlebanshee 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@cantfindmykeys yeah, mine is simply leaving the ground lol I have flown one as a baby and once as an adult. As an adult I never left my chair for an 8 hour flight, my anxiety was at max.

    • @cantfindmykeys
      @cantfindmykeys 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@littlebanshee I understand completely. I asked my doctor for something to control a possible panic attack. I hate taking pharmaceuticals but I took enough xanax to knock out a T-rex. Even so, my anxiety kept me from passing out. I'm allergic to alcohol so I can't drink myself unconscious for air travel.

  • @raymondleongdiva
    @raymondleongdiva 10 месяцев назад +6

    The best documentary I ever saw on MH...may their souls rest in peace...and may one day we will have full closure for their families and loved ones...❤

  • @hosseindr.askari6161
    @hosseindr.askari6161 Год назад

    Your videos are excellent 💙👏💙👏

  • @Petersaiki
    @Petersaiki Год назад +214

    I was in A&P mechanic school when this happened! Our instructor walked in the classroom and told us what happened. To this day, I remember when he told us that they probably would never find the plane. Aviation technology is a lot further than it was back in 2014. I do really hope they find this plane…but I doubt they will find an intact fuselage.

    • @mkandy81
      @mkandy81 Год назад +28

      Certainly not intact, many pieces of the plane have already been found, as shown in this programme. Including pieces from inside the fuselage. What’s left is at the bottom of the ocean

    • @olivegrace1508
      @olivegrace1508 Год назад +17

      May the souls of the departed Rest In Peace. I pray they find the Back Boxes in order to know the full story of what really when on.

    • @olivegrace1508
      @olivegrace1508 Год назад

      13:48

    • @admiralbenbow5083
      @admiralbenbow5083 Год назад +23

      This is not aviation technology. It is finding stuff in the sea technology.

    • @jessw391
      @jessw391 Год назад +4

      Why did he say it would never be found? I mean obviously its true now but aren't most planes found when they crash into the sea. What did he think was different about this one?

  • @noelparmar
    @noelparmar Год назад +111

    RIP to all those who perished in this tragic incident. Hopefully we find this plane and families get answers

    • @danmulholland1634
      @danmulholland1634 Год назад

      We most likely will find the remains of the plane one day we have advanced so much in the last 15 year's its not even funny we have so much more technology and ways to track things were almost there to the cure for infertility(IVG) and bringing back the mammoth and hes been extinct for thousands of years I cant wait to see what the next 20 year's will look like

    • @user-yx9ns1sc9l
      @user-yx9ns1sc9l 9 месяцев назад

      Not all the victims are innocent, 5he Chinese are not!!!

    • @User-jr7vf
      @User-jr7vf 3 месяца назад

      You know what, passengers and crew are actually ALIVE, they are throwing a party in an island.

    • @jacintanyambura4386
      @jacintanyambura4386 3 месяца назад

      @@User-jr7vf 😆 where did you source this?smh

  • @theresehopkins1581
    @theresehopkins1581 10 месяцев назад

    Wow!!!....💚 Excellent video!!!....💙 Thank you National Geographic!!!! 😊❤🧡💗💕💞💓

  • @StarbucksYes
    @StarbucksYes 2 месяца назад +4

    “Theories will stay as theories until they find the plane and the black box” - I keep hearing people say this and it’s heartbreaking that we have to keep carrying on the word but it’s unfortunately true. From theories of the pilot, to aliens, to it being shot down; we must never take our or others lives for granted. A life can be taken within seconds and majority of those lives never got a proper good bye or farewell. RIP to the victims💔🕊️

  • @ponygirlusa
    @ponygirlusa Год назад +253

    I hope that they'll resume searching again soon. Not only to bring closure to the friends and families of those lost but to learn how to prevent whatever went wrong.

    • @batman_2004
      @batman_2004 Год назад +17

      But who is going to fund it? The ocean is so vast.

    • @jgpacheco21
      @jgpacheco21 Год назад +23

      Anyone do research anymore? Ocean Infinity has made 2 brand new autonomous ships with new technology to find the plane on a "no find, no fee" basis. If found its gonna cost $70 million. The Malaysian government refused but they did the same for the first search, agreeing to pay at the last minute. Its been 10 years technology has greatly improved.

    • @ponygirlusa
      @ponygirlusa Год назад +4

      @@jgpacheco21 What's your point? Right now, no one is searching.

    • @jgpacheco21
      @jgpacheco21 Год назад +21

      @@ponygirlusa Point is do some research. The search is only suspended not cancelled, to begin this year or early 2024. There are logistical and political circumstances as to why it isnt currently being searched. Maybe thats something you can find out on your own.

    • @ponygirlusa
      @ponygirlusa Год назад +3

      @@jgpacheco21 Suspended, mastermind. Suspended means not currently active. 😂

  • @kolasillers7776
    @kolasillers7776 Год назад +32

    I said it before and will say it again. Some people know much more than we do.

  • @adityayekhe8882
    @adityayekhe8882 5 месяцев назад

    It is chilling, heart breaking & just sad that it went missing that way... Those families needed closures.

  • @mab.sen2018
    @mab.sen2018 10 месяцев назад +5

    Thanks a lot to Team National Geographic for gift us such a mysterious documentary. 🙏🙏🙏

  • @indie12
    @indie12 Год назад +6

    excellent documentary,thank you

  • @luckydragon5157
    @luckydragon5157 Год назад +98

    For a moment I thought that this was an older video about the investigation, but seeing it was rather recent shocked me. All this time and where it is still is a mystery, I feel bad for the all the relatives, they'll never have closure about what caused their loved ones to die.

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 Год назад +2

      Yes, it is a rather "old" video.
      Not the most up to date programme on the subject anyway, even if relatively little more has been discovered since, of course.

    • @michaelfarnan6253
      @michaelfarnan6253 Год назад

      @@frontenac5083 old? This came out 5 days ago. Are you okay?

    • @Chishannicon
      @Chishannicon Год назад +10

      @@michaelfarnan6253 It's from 2018. It says so at the end of the credits.

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton Год назад

      It's not a mystery. I could open Google maps and tell you where it hit within 100 miles. There simply is nothing to find.

    • @zoro5483
      @zoro5483 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@NormAppleton I dare you to find it , Indiana Jones

  • @freyasvalky
    @freyasvalky Год назад +4

    I wonder if anyone is still looking? but then... after all these years, I doubt there is a lot left to understand what happened

  • @deanna5090
    @deanna5090 3 месяца назад +1

    To shed light on past tragedy is important also.

  • @lucasmoore8801
    @lucasmoore8801 Год назад +34

    "Planes crash all the time they don't disappear" Soooo comforting thanks for that. This crash is truly mind baffling. RIP to all the victims of 370 tragic as heck. ❤❤

    • @cantfindmykeys
      @cantfindmykeys Год назад +7

      the way that oceanographer said "planes crash routinely.." was so comforting. Honestly, I wouldn't care about being found so much as not crashing.

  • @victorcontreras9138
    @victorcontreras9138 Год назад +3

    Well just hearing this optimism is good for the soul! I hope these new ideas will be fruitful as I remain glued to my most interested subject in these videos.

  • @user-bb7oo6cm4q
    @user-bb7oo6cm4q 8 месяцев назад

    Great documentation.. good job..

  • @z1s2d3c4
    @z1s2d3c4 Год назад +5

    omg much much more mature undertaking of the incident than the netflix documentary. loved this version. Natgeo is Natgeo.

  • @Aditya-pe1xh
    @Aditya-pe1xh Год назад +4

    Amazing high quality documentary !!

  • @ghetonici8985
    @ghetonici8985 Год назад +28

    I really hope this plane is found one day. A Completely heartbreaking tragedy💔

  • @Graceful82
    @Graceful82 6 месяцев назад

    So glad the families were able to get closure..

  • @kinuthiacarolyne4027
    @kinuthiacarolyne4027 4 дня назад

    Its so heartbreaking after all the search all this years..we shall meet on the beatiful shore.

  • @mollypercocet7685
    @mollypercocet7685 Год назад +10

    This is very sad, i can just imagine the agony the families are still going through😭😭😭

  • @harrietharlow9929
    @harrietharlow9929 Год назад +350

    This was fascinating and i'm so glad that we can now have 3D images of the ocean floor. I hope they'll find the wreck one day so that the familes and friends of the lost can have some closure. I was brought to tear when the one searcher mentioned the seatback TV and how it could have been the last thing a passenger saw.

    • @thunderblyat8839
      @thunderblyat8839 Год назад +2

      that seatback TV...where, time?

    • @Noname-se3sq
      @Noname-se3sq Год назад +7

      @@thunderblyat8839 34:15

    • @bonnieagliata4780
      @bonnieagliata4780 Год назад +14

      @Harriet
      What got to me was learning about a dust covered Porsche in 'long term parking',waiting for her owner. She's not coming back. They said if she does return, they will 'wave the fee ',here's to HOPE...

    • @elliekwong3180
      @elliekwong3180 Год назад

      @@bonnieagliata4780 : Who owns the Porsche? A passenger?

    • @pjborchhardt
      @pjborchhardt Год назад

      Anyone considered MH17 was MH370? How about that? And check, Diego Garcia, thats where the sound recorders located the "explosion" site. There were witnesses in Maledives but all got dismissed.

  • @jayjohn8832
    @jayjohn8832 Год назад +6

    Nicely composed video. I was wondering if aircraft manufacturers have learnt a lesson from this incident and made improvements to the safety systems on board commercial airliners ? If it was my choice, I would try to design a tamper-proof, destruction-proof ( withstand 100G impacts ) strong-signal emitting black box that would make it very easy to zero in on a crashed airliner's location even if it is at the bottom of the Marianas Trench. Nowadays, I believe there are ways to overcome the signal-muffling properties of the water-air interface so that sonar ( or other ) signals from the bottom of the sea can be detected many thousandsd of feet up in the air. The money spent on developing something like this would pay back many times the millions of dollars spent on routine air and sea searches.
    Just my 2 cents. May the souls of the 239+ dead R.I.P. !!

  • @AsFewFalseThingsAsPossible
    @AsFewFalseThingsAsPossible 11 месяцев назад +30

    The fact that the sensitive hydrophones off the west coast of Australia picked up a far distant "geological event" but not the sound of a jet liner smashing into the sea, along with the absence of a wide debris field implies the aircraft was traveling very slowly and essentially "landed" on the water.

    • @melissacoxen6001
      @melissacoxen6001 8 месяцев назад +1

      The wing of the plane they found proves that is not the case. The plane wasn't configured for a ditching. The aeleron would have been extended and it wasn't. They found 30 pieces of plane on the opposite side of the ocean. The plane wing was configured for regular flight. They couldn't have slowed it down enough to get close to the water or land softly.

    • @melissacoxen6001
      @melissacoxen6001 8 месяцев назад +7

      The loud bang they found actually could have been the plane but since it was so far from the location they chose to search they decided it was likely a volcanic event underwater but they never actually proved it, or researched it. They shrugged it off but with where they found wreckage way out close to where that sound came from, it makes me think it was the plane. Malaysia doesn't want that plane found because it makes their captain and crew look bad and they won't acknowledge it.

    • @lindaluvsfood7389
      @lindaluvsfood7389 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@melissacoxen6001 that's a possible theory, however 1 thing people need to consider is ocean currents & drifts, the first piece of debris of MH370 was not found until over 1 year after the crash. During that 1 year period there would've been alot of ocean currents and geological changes which would have carried the debris across the Indian ocean to the other side of the search area. So it's still possible that the plane crashed exactly where or near the search area was, and the debris were simply carried or drifted over to the other side of the Indian ocean by currents over time.

    • @RichardPhilbin
      @RichardPhilbin 4 месяца назад +1

      I was curious to know if they compared the location of that sound with ocean drift patters since there was no debris found in western Australia.

  • @TheeRomantic
    @TheeRomantic Год назад +3

    Super underrated series 💖

  • @kimberlybellard6972
    @kimberlybellard6972 Год назад +81

    The photographs of the wreckage still at the bottom of the ocean were very creepy

    • @ankurraina5498
      @ankurraina5498 Год назад +1

      True

    • @frontenac5083
      @frontenac5083 Год назад +3

      There are no photographs of the plane on the bottom of the ocean (obviously) as the wreckage hasn't been fount.

    • @user-zv3qe6tv2v
      @user-zv3qe6tv2v Год назад +1

      @@frontenac5083 they did find wreckage stop saying bs

    • @prinzeugen1220
      @prinzeugen1220 Год назад +1

      @@user-zv3qe6tv2v No they did not find any confirmed wreckage. The Netflix documentary has way more detail than this one. That claperon they found has a missing ID plate, something riveted or glued that would not come off during an explosion or crash. It is removed only at junkyards when dismantling a plane. Apparently there were 12 numbers on that claperon that were sent to Boeing and only one matched a 777, one out of 12. Then you have that Blaine guy, treasure hunter that based on oceanographer's suggestions goes to Mozambique and finds pieces of wreckage after walking two hours on the very first beach he went to. Just like that, you go to Mozambique, on the right, and here;s your MH370 part waiting for you. Then he goes to Madagascar and guess what ? He finds more pieces.

  • @JimmyjimmyJimmyjimmy-ih3yd
    @JimmyjimmyJimmyjimmy-ih3yd Год назад +4

    This documentary is far better than the recent Netflix offering.

  • @shubhrasamuel9759
    @shubhrasamuel9759 6 месяцев назад +3

    Very informative documentary, they presented the facts without any adding any drama to it. I really wish that someday the world gets to know what happened to MH370, it would be a huge help to the families who lost their loved ones. Maybe one day nature decides to have mercy and reveal the answers to this mystery. Until then we can just be hopeful and stay strong in our faith.

  • @amberklaire9419
    @amberklaire9419 Год назад +90

    The only thing that makes me feel slightly more at peace is that with the significant climb it made, the cabin would have de- pressurized and the people on board would have passed out and died. The cockpit would have had a longer supply of oxygen, but would have run out again after the pressure loss.
    When it crashed, there is a very good chance that none of the passengers were aware of what was going on, or were already deceased. No one would have suffered or drowned.

    • @larinadorca5781
      @larinadorca5781 Год назад +4

      Families of the passengers were saying they were calling and some phones were ringing just no one answered. Also a woman was receiving a call from one and when she picked up it was late it stopped (sorry my english)

    • @shannenhiggins4975
      @shannenhiggins4975 Год назад +22

      @@larinadorca5781 unfortunately this seems like this isn’t possible and a result of frantic family members trying to get a hold of missing relatives. There would have been no coverage at the crash site

    • @SuzyQ334
      @SuzyQ334 10 месяцев назад +9

      The fact that the plane carried on flying for 6 hours (until it ran out of fuel presumably) after it lost contact with air traffic control suggests you are probably right. Something catastrophic occurred on that plane not long after take-off. My heart goes out to everyone on board and their families - they need answers.

    • @ManiyaVinas
      @ManiyaVinas 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@SuzyQ334
      Do you think they flew in the wrong direction?

    • @nostrildumbass2019
      @nostrildumbass2019 8 месяцев назад

      It didn’t crash.

  • @residentevil1901
    @residentevil1901 Год назад +103

    Hats off to the cameraman who went deep under water plus captured the final moments of the plane for us

    • @jamescook7094
      @jamescook7094 Год назад +8

      Sooo funny 😁

    • @lizvickers7156
      @lizvickers7156 Год назад +4

      @James Cook Your funny..... funny sad

    • @jamescook7094
      @jamescook7094 Год назад +2

      @@lizvickers7156
      I am sad. Lol

    • @LavenderSunrise
      @LavenderSunrise Год назад +2

      Let's also give props to the camera operator who filmed the satellite, amazing stuff

    • @residentevil1901
      @residentevil1901 Год назад +1

      @@LavenderSunrise Oh yea..sorry my bad...equal credits to him as well for going up in a space suit and recoding for us

  • @ernestj.b.danquah873
    @ernestj.b.danquah873 10 месяцев назад

    A complete mystery till date. I hope it's found someday.

  • @lolohdhhebd
    @lolohdhhebd 11 месяцев назад

    hopefully they find it we have been looking for it all over the world

  • @404SportzCardz
    @404SportzCardz Год назад +36

    Even with the technology from 2014, it’s astonishing that a commercial jetliner could vanish like that….Condolences to all of the affected 🙏

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton Год назад +7

      That space between Sri Lanka and Antarctica is dead water as far as shipping or flight routes go.

    • @GooseGumlizzard
      @GooseGumlizzard 8 месяцев назад +5

      because the pilot didn't want the plane to be found.

  • @karyncremeens9376
    @karyncremeens9376 Год назад +36

    Malaysian govt never wanted that plane found. They don’t want to pay out the lawsuits, especially if they were talking to the pilot while he was in the holding pattern. They still didn’t look where the glide path would have taken it.

    • @theonlychild4719
      @theonlychild4719 Год назад +6

      That's it , periodt They don't want the world to know...

    • @brucewayne3602
      @brucewayne3602 Год назад +1

      absolutely ... see my comment about Najib above !!!

  • @surajyadav3428
    @surajyadav3428 11 месяцев назад +7

    Whether it was desperately done by Pilot or it was unfortunate tragedy, the thing which makes this incident a mystery is nothing conclusive found even after conducting these extreme researches and discoveries by the top authorities.

  • @karenwilson5445
    @karenwilson5445 2 месяца назад +2

    What about pinging the passenger phones & other devices even if some were turned off? Possibly following/tracking the devices & laying the coordinates with where the plane went down.