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Search team head Angus Houston developments in the last 24 hours is " the most promising clues " so far in the search for the missing plane .Angus Houston , chief of Australian institutions to coordinate search Malaysian Airlines plane was missing , shows a map during a press conference in Perth ( 7/4 ) . ( Reuters / Richard Polden )


 
Authorities in Australia say a naval vessel has detected new signals are " consistent " with the black box flight data recorder from Malaysia Airlines lost .
Search team head Angus Houston told reporters Monday ( 7/4 ) in Perth that developments in the last 24 hours is a " most promising clues " so far in the search for the Boeing 777 jet in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Australia .
He stressed that the need to further confirmation , which could take several days , but he described the information obtained by the detector U.S. naval ship was " very encouraging . "
Houston said detector carried by ship Australia 's Ocean Shield has a contact for 2 hours and 20 minutes , followed by another contact for 13 minutes . He said this would be " consistent with transmission from the flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder . "
If the common position of the last signals were confirmed , he said , automated underwater vehicle can be sent to investigate.
On Sunday , officials said three distinctive voice fleeting sounds of the Indian Ocean .
The voices that sound is heard followed Chinese ship on Friday and Saturday from different places in the search area .
The plane was lost early in the morning March 8 with 239 people on board the flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing .
The plane disappeared without a distress call , and the authorities have not removing any possibility , including hijacking , sabotage or mechanical failure .
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