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Source: Investigators found broken joints on the track at Spanish rail crash scene

According to a source briefed about the initial investigations, experts investigating the cause of the Sunday derailment in Spain of a high speed train, which killed at least 39 people found a cracked joint on the rails. According to a source briefed on the initial investigations into the disaster, experts investigating the cause of Sunday's derailment of a high-speed train in Spain found?a broken joint on the rails.

The accident occurred near Adamuz, in the southern province Cordoba. It is about 360 km (230 miles) south of Madrid.

The source said that technicians on site examining the rails found some wear at the joint between sections of rails, called a "fishplate", which showed the fault was present for some time.

The researchers found that the defective joint caused a gap to widen as the trains traveled along the track.

Source, who declined to be named due to the sensitive nature of the subject, stated that the technicians believed the faulty joint was key to identifying the exact cause of the accident. The Commission of Investigation of Rail Accidents in Spain (CIAF), tasked with investigating the cause of the disaster, has not responded to requests for comment.

Adif, Spain's rail operator and the Spanish Transport Ministry, which supervises CIAF, did not reply to any requests for comments.

Alvaro Fernandez Heredia told Cadena Ser that it is too early to discuss the cause. He said that the accident occurred in "strange circumstances", adding that "human errors are practically ruled out."

Initial Findings from the Inspection

According to the source, the first carriages of a train operated by the Spanish company Iryo crossed the gap between the rails. However, the eighth carriage, which was the last carriage, derailed and brought with it the sixth and seventh carriages.

Iryo, a private?rail company, is majority owned by the Italian state-controlled rail group Ferrovie dello Stato.

Sources pointed out a photo showing a gap in the vertical rail, which was also included in a picture that Guardia Civil Spain shared with the media. As forensic inspectors?photograph the area, police incident numbers are marked.

The crash site was visited by the Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, and Transport Minister Oscar Puente on Monday morning. Sanchez cancelled his trip the World Economic Forum at Davos in Switzerland following the accident.

Puente stated that the Iryo?train was under four years old, and that the rail track had been completely reconstructed last May.

Source: Hitachi Rail, the manufacturer of the train, performed a routine inspection on the train, which was conducted on January 15, and found that there were no anomalies.

It is the Frecciarossa 1000 model, which is also used in Italy's high speed network. (Reporting and Editing by Josephine Mason, London, and Jon Boyle).

(source: Reuters)