Black boxes
May 3, 2011Deep sea search teams have located both flight data recorders from the Air France flight that crashed mysteriously in the Atlantic Ocean in June 2009, killing all 228 people on board.
The first black box was "localized and identified" on Sunday morning and brought up from a depth of 4,000 meters (4,375 yards) according to a statement by France's Bureau of Investigation and Analysis (BEA). Photos on the BEA website, before the box was pulled to the surface, show an orange cylindrical object half buried in the sand.
The second black box was recovered Monday evening by a robotic submarine "in good condition," according to BEA chief Jean-Paul Troadec. The two boxes were found within 10 meters of each other and have been sent to Paris to begin analysis in about a week.
According to officials, it was too early to say whether the devices would yield information about the cause of crash of Flight 447, which was en route to Paris from Rio de Janeiro.
The extent of what can be found out about the disaster depends on how much of the flight recorders' data has been corroded. Damage to the data will hinder the investigation but not necessarily rule out determining the cause of the crash.
Speculation about what caused the accident has focused on the possible malfunctioning of the aircraft's speed sensors, which seemed to give inconsistent readings before communication was lost.
The recent discovery of pieces of the plane's wreckage and the chassis of the flight recorder had reignited hopes of finding the recording devices and solving the mystery of the crash.
The search for the black boxes has taken 23 months and cost 35 million euros ($52 million), which is being paid for by Air France and Airbus.
Author: Christian Nathler, Sarah Harman (dpa, AFP, Reuters)
Editor: Martin Kuebler