Wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal is a ray of light after almost 2 months of the Malaysia Airlines plane disappeared. The wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal is reportedly from an Australian company which detected the "wreckage of a commercial airliner" on sea-floor scans along the Bay of Bengal.

The company which allegedly had the wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal is named GeoResonance. The Australian firm was reportedly scanning for metals along the ocean floor when they got a hit for an object with the same metallic structure that of a commercial plane. According to the company, the supposed wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal appeared in that part of the ocean March 5th and 10th of 2014.

The dates given by GeoResonance fit the Malaysia Airlines plane's disappearance, which happened March 8. Now, the supposed wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal is a strong possibility.

The site where the supposed wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal is 1000 miles from Bangladesh. It is situated at the northern tip of the initial search area, however it's reportedly thousands of miles from the current concentrated search area.

According to the Joint Agency Coordination Centre, the claim that the supposed wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal is untrue as they still believe that the current concentrated search area is where MH370's remains can be most likely found.

GeoResonance also said in a statement, 'The company is not declaring this is MH370, however it should be investigated." David Pope, the company's director said he only made the announcement to the public when he felt authorities were disregarding it. He told CNN today, "We're a large group of scientists, and we were being ignored, and we thought we had a moral obligation to get our findings to the authorities."

GeoResonance, the company with information on the supposed wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal normally uses remote sensing technology to look for oil, gas and mineral deposits. They used the same technology to look for chemical elements in aircraft, such as aluminum, titanium and jet fuel residue.

This announcement from the Australian firm of the supposed wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal came after a declaration from the Australian Prime Minister that debris of the missing Malaysia Airlines plane would have sunk by now.

Meanwhile, former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has already expressed his doubts as to the possibility that the MH370 crashed into the Indian Ocean. He even blamed manufacturer Boeing for its fate.

Wreckage found of missing plane MH370 in Bay of Bengal may or may not be definite, but still for the relatives of the passengers of the missing Malaysia Airlines plane, this hope is a ray of light in a sea of darkness.