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They were searching for MH370 but found this 19th century shipwreck instead

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau found this shipwreck while searching for Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370.AP

CANBERRA, Australia — The undersea search for the Malaysian airliner that vanished almost two years ago has found a second 19th-century shipwreck deep in the Indian Ocean off the west Australian coast, officials said Wednesday.

A sonar search for the wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370 found what appeared to be a man-made object on Dec. 19, the Australian Transport Safety Bureau said in a statement.

A follow-up investigation using an underwater drone captured high-resolution sonar images on Jan. 2 that confirmed that the find was a shipwreck, said the bureau, which is running the search for the Boeing 777 which vanished on March 8, 2014.

The Shipwreck Galleries of the Western Australian Museum conducted a preliminary review of the images and advised that the wreck was likely a steel or iron ship dating from the turn of the 19th century, the bureau said.

The wreck was found under water 12,100 feet deep, 1,600 miles southwest of the Australian port of Fremantle where the three search vessels are based, the bureau said.

The sea hunt similarly found what appeared to be a man-made object in March last year 12,800 feet deep. But it wasn’t until May that a closer look confirmed that it was not plane wreckage but the wreck of a cargo ship built in the mid- to late 19th century. Hundreds of such ships were lost during voyages across the Indian Ocean. Neither ship is likely to be identified because of the cost of mounting closer examinations.

Flight MH370 is thought to have crashed in the Indian Ocean with 239 passengers and crew aboard more than 1,100 miles southwest of Australia after mysteriously flying off course during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

Searchers have been combing a 46,000-square-mile part of the Indian Ocean since late 2014. A wing flap found in July on the other side of the Indian Ocean when it washed up on Reunion Island is the only debris recovered.

More than 30,000 square miles of the sea floor have been scoured so far, and the search is scheduled to wind up by the middle of the year if nothing else from Flight MH370 is found.