Search teams trying to find the missing Malaysia Airlines plane have detected another possible signal from a black box recorder.
After dropping sound-locating buoys by parachute into the search zone, an Australian navy P-3 Orion aircraft detected the potential signal on Thursday afternoon in the same area pings were heard on Saturday.
If confirmed, it will be the fifth signal to have been recorded by search teams.
Angus Houston, who is in charge of the operation, confirmed the surveillance plane had picked up the "possible signal".
A map showing the two of the search areas"The acoustic data will require further analysis overnight but shows potential of being from a made-made source," he said.
On Saturday a ship picked up signals consistent with those emitted by a black box, known as pings, and again on Tuesday, allowing searchers to narrow down their search area.
The Australian naval ship Ocean Shield, which detected the four previous pings using a Towed Pinger Locator, was joined in the area by HMS Echo and Haixun 01, a Chinese ship.
The first four pings were heard in the smaller zone being searchedThey are searching an area of the southern Indian Ocean 1,670km (1,040 miles) from Perth after the plane went missing en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8.
The Haixun 01 vessel initially reported some acoustic signals south of where the Ocean Shield sounds were detected on Saturday.
Search aircraft, like the Orion, undertook at least 30 flights on ThursdayBut the signals heard by the Chinese ship were not believed to have occurred again.
The Australian Navy has been dropping the buoys in a pattern across the area where the Ocean Shield heard the pings.
Attached to each is a hydrophone listening device which dangles about 300m (1,000ft) below the surface.
ADV Ocean Shield is towing a "Pinger Locator"Australian Navy Commodore Peter Leavy said the hope was that the buoys would be able to pinpoint the source of the signals.
But experts say time is running out as pingers on black boxes are designed to emit signals for no more than 30 days.
Hopes that they may be tracked down in time rose on Thursday after an Australian government document circulated among agencies involved in the search said the pingers could continue for up to 10 more days.
Mr Houston on Wednesday expressed "optimism" about the ongoing search operation.
"I'm now optimistic that we will find the aircraft, or what is left of the aircraft, in the not too distant future," he said.
"But we haven't found it yet, because this is a very challenging business."
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