Object spotted on ocean floor in sub hunt

Concern for the crew of a missing Argentinian submarine are growing amid fears the vessel may be running low on oxygen.

A group of people pray in support of the crew of the missing submarine

Prayers are being held for the crew of a missing Argentine submarine. (AAP)

A US navy plane searching for a missing Argentinian submarine has spotted an object on the ocean floor, local media say.

The plane's radar had discovered an area of heat around 70m below the surface of the southern Atlantic, leading rescuers to believe it could be the missing ARA San Juan, the radio station Mitre and the newspaper Clarin reported.

A mini submarine had been sent to the spot, 300km east of the Patagonian harbour Puerto Madryn, to identify the object, they reported. Argentina's Ministry of Defence refused to confirm the report.

The German-made submarine, with 44 crew members on board, went missing six days ago. It has a seven-day supply of oxygen.
The regional hospital in the city of Comodoro Rivadavia has been ordered to prepare for possible casualties, with all operations cancelled and four theatres freed up.

The search operation, which has 13 planes and 17 boats at its disposal, is now at a "critical phase," according to the Argentinian navy.

"Our concerns about the oxygen reserves on board are growing," navy spokesman Enrique Balbi said.

The search is the largest manoeuvre in the southern Atlantic since the Falklands War of 1982, covering 482,000 square kilometres.

Hopes had been raised and dashed earlier after the sighting of a lifeboat and flares proved to be false alarms, as did a noise detected coming from the ocean.

Family members of the crew who are gathered at the Mar del Plata naval base are increasingly distressed, navy psychologist Victor Hugo Duga said. "The state of mind is very low," he said.

In its last contact with its naval base last Wednesday, the submarine had given word of a battery glitch, Captain Gabriel Galeazzi, another navy spokesman, said.

The crew was then ordered to take the shortest route to its home port of Mar del Plata, 400km south of Buenos Aires, Galeazzi said.

The navy has avoided associating the mechanical problem with the disappearance of the vessel and said it had sufficient back-up machinery.


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Source: AAP


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