What if the ocean heard Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 crash—and everyone missed it? An exclusive investigation reveals a long-hidden scientific report that could reshape the hunt for the airliner, 12 years later.
This article orginally ran in Popular Mechanics on July 16, 2026.
JEAN-YVES ROYER COULDN’T STOP thinking about what his underwater microphones might have heard.
It was March 2014, days after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 took off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing and mysteriously vanished into the night with 239 people on board. Investigators would soon come to believe the Boeing 777 had flown south and crashed somewhere in the southern Indian Ocean, and searchers were urgently looking for the plane’s black boxes. But Royer, a scientist at the French government research organization CNRS, knew that something else was already waiting in those waters, potentially recording the sound of the airliner’s final moments: his network of autonomous hydrophones.
The network was called OHASISBIO, a French acronym meaning the Hydroacoustic Observatory of Seismicity and Biodiversity. Just weeks before MH370 disappeared on March 8, Royer’s team had moored hydrophones at six sites in the southern Indian Ocean, from the waters near Crozet and Kerguelen to the Madagascar Basin and the Southeast Indian Ridge. They were built to continuously record the ocean’s low-frequency sounds, including submarine earthquakes, volcanic eruptions on the seafloor, the calls of baleen whales, icequakes, ice tremors, and the background noise of a vast ocean in motion.
Now, Royer realized, they might also have captured something they were never designed to detect: the sound of a missing commercial jet hitting the sea.
The catch? He couldn’t listen yet.
Royer’s hydrophones didn’t stream their recordings back to shore. They were autonomous instruments moored far from land, storing recordings internally as they listened through the months after MH370 disappeared. Before Royer could search for the acoustic trace of a possible crash, he had to wait for the buoys to finish their mission, release from their moorings, and return to the surface in January and February 2015. Only then could his team recover them, download the recordings, and search the audio for the hours after MH370’s final satellite transmission for a sound loud enough to have come from a Boeing 777 hitting the Indian Ocean.
Continue reading A New Clue From the Night MH370 Vanished May Radically Change the Search for the Missing Plane