Australian defence vessel Ocean Shield has been using a US Navy towed pinger locater to listen out for possible signals from MH370, which were detected twice last weekend and twice on April 8.
But no new signals have been confirmed since then, prompting experts to conclude that the batteries of the Boeing 777-200's black boxes may have died because the battery life usually lasts for only a month - and that window has passed.
Officials believe the plane flew off course for an unknown reason and went down off the west coast of Australia in the southern Indian Ocean.
Finding the black boxes is crucial to know what happened before the Beijing-bound Malaysia Airlines jet with 239 people, including five Indians, mysteriously vanished after taking off from Kuala Lumpur.
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Now, searchers may have to deploy the American Bluefin- 21, a probe equipped with side-scan sonar -- an acoustic technology that creates pictures from the reflections of sound rather than light.
Though the discovery of four pings, believed to be from the Flight MH370's black boxes -- its flight data recorder and its cockpit voice recorder -- have helped investigators narrow the search area, they would still face a formidable task to track the plane at depths of over 4,500 meters.
"It's a lot of terrain to cover," given that the Bluefin -21 moves at the pace of a leisurely stroll, Earle said.
Once the debris field is found, then other equipment -- such as remotely operated vehicles -- would be brought in to recover the black boxes, Earle was quoted as saying by CNN.
Remotely Operated Vehicles working at depths of three miles would require power conveyed down a cable from a ship above, she said. "There are not many pieces of equipment in the world able to do this.