The airplane fragment found on the Indian Ocean island of Reunion is from a Boeing 777 — the same as missing Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370 — sources told NBC News on Thursday.
The barnacle-covered plane piece was found by a crew cleaning the coastline Wednesday. On it was a number — 657-BB — which sources said is attached to a Boeing 777.
MH370, which disappeared in March 2014, is the only 777 known to be missing anywhere in the world.
The remains of a suitcase were also reported to have been found in the same area Thursday as air, land and sea crews combed the beaches and scoured the waters off Reunion Island, a French territory east of Madagascar off the southern tip of Africa.
Officials had no immediate comment on the suitcase.
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The debris found Wednesday is a flaperon from the wing’s trailing edge, sources confirmed. That’s a mashed-up word describing a combination of a flap — which helps determine a plane’s altitude, or vertical direction — and an aileron, which controls how it “rolls” into a new direction horizontally.
Agnes Thibault, a spokeswoman for the Paris prosecutor’s office, told NBC News that the fragment would be sent to a division of the French Defense Ministry in Toulouse to be examined in a few days. France is leading the official judicial investigation because the debris was found on French territory. The co-pilot and some of the victims also were French.
“This is obviously a very significant development,” Australian Deputy Prime Minister Warren Truss told reporters Thursday in Sydney. “It’s the first real evidence that there is a possibility that a part of the aircraft may have been found It’s too early to make that judgment, but clearly we are treating this as a major lead.”








