THE cockpit and tail of missing plane MH370 complete with its Malaysia Airlines logo has been spotted in Cambodia, an amateur sleuth has claimed.

The online hunt for the jet intensified after what appeared to be wreckage was found on Google Maps in the jungle by Brit Ian Wilson.

A second “crash site” ten miles away was then seen on satellite images by fellow part-time plane-hunter Daniel Boyer.

And he now says he can make out the aircraft’s cockpit and tail in the grainy pics.

The photos show several white objects lying on the forest floor north-west of Cambodia’s capital Phnom Penh.

Boyer told the Daily Star one piece measures 17.8ft – close to the 19ft 3in of a Boeing 777 cockpit, leaving him “convinced” this was the front of the plane.

And he insisted he can see the red outline of Malaysia Airlines’ logo on another piece, which he said must be the tail.

The piece apparently measures 31.7ft – whereas a tail piece normally measures 30ft.

Mr Boyer told the website: “I couldn’t believe it when I made the sighting.

“First the cockpit can be seen, and now this.

“The debris definitely needs to be investigated.”

The first images of the jet, which vanished on March 8, 2014, were found after video producer Ian Wilson spent "hours" searching online.

Images from Google Maps showed the outline of a large plane in a remote part of southern Cambodia – which could simply be an aircraft flying directly below the satellite which photographed it.

But Google Earth’s copyright date and imagery date for the picture have been listed as different years in recent weeks, reports The Daily Star.

This has led to speculation the supposed wreckage has been snapped several times in the past by the tech giant’s satellites - ruling out the theory that Wilson's picture shows a plane in flight.

It has also been claimed the outline of the plane was spotted in May, 2014, using Google Maps – just two months after the jet vanished.

Wilson believes this adds further credence to his theory and says he plans to visit the site with his brother – in a bid to capture the £53million finder’s fee.

He told the Star: “After much discussion last night, we’re just organising final vaccinations and the hiring of guides.”

But aviation expert Yijun Yu puts the imagery date mystery down to either a system glitch or that Google hasn’t updated its pictures for the spot.

Flight 370 disappeared on March 8, 2014, en route from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing with 239 people on board.

Just 38 minutes into the flight, MH370 lost contact with Malaysia Airlines.

The plane was never found despite a search that cost millions and lasted for years.

Various theories - some more viable than others - emerged to explain what happened to the plane.

Other than the Cambodian jungle theory, these include the "suicidal" pilot deliberately crashing into the sea, the aircraft being shot down by North Korea and a conspiracy to bring down the Malaysian government.