Australia's research agency CSIRO is examining new evidence into the fate of Flight MH370 which it believes points to the location of the missing aircraft.
Flight MH370 disappeared on March 8, 2014 with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board. Oceanographic research has continued since the underwater search was suspended in January this year.
High-resolution images from an Airbus Pleiades 1A satellite showing “probably man-made” objects similar to debris items since found were taken on March 23, 2014, a little more than two weeks after the passenger airline went missing in the Indian Ocean.
Geoscience Australia completed a new analysis earlier this year, and the location of the objects in the images at the time of the crash was estimated by CSIRO using drift analysis.
https://maritime-executive.com/article/satellite-data-offers-new-estimate-of-mh370-location
View attachment 122861
If I'm reading the maps right, checked on a MH370 search area map with the coordinates on it. From the way it looks to me, the new proposed search area would be just east of and near the bottom of the search area where they searched before, just a little closer to Australia. This is not north of the search area where we thought it might be.
From your link -
..The CSIRO now places the mostly likely location of the aircraft “with unprecedented precision and certainty” at 35.6°S, 92.8°E, .
and
...but the other two candidates (34.7°S 92.6°E and 35.3°S 91.8°E) are not far away.