Debris that washed up on the island nation's shores was sent to Malaysia this week for analysis of its origin.
Malaysia Airlines has decided against transporting relatives to the location where debris thought to be linked to a missing plane was found.
French authorities launched air-and-sea search operations last week around Reunion Island after a wing flap washed up on its shores last month.
Items such as a package of noodles and a luggage tag were likely not from a Malaysia Airlines jet, but officials were glad people were looking.
Efforts to find the missing Malaysia Airlines jetliner are estimated to cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
Families of those on board the missing plane have yet again raised doubts over Malaysia's handling of the search.
Debris found near an Indian Ocean archipelago was from a barge that capsized Feb. 10, the vessel's captain said.
The focus of the search for the missing plane has now shifted to an area about 2,300 miles west of the ongoing operation in the southern Indian Ocean.
A laminated copy of the Muslim holy book has been found near the site of other discoveries believed linked to a missing Malaysia Airlines flight.
The weekly magazine's cover shows a pair of hands groping a pair of breasts with the caption, "We've found a bit of the pilot and the air hostess."
France has dismissed Malaysia’s claims that more debris has been found on Reunion Island.
After the discovery of MH370 debris, families of passengers aboard the doomed flight remain deeply skeptical of the investigation and continue to demand answers.
Seat cushions, aluminum foil and window panes were found Thursday on Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean.
Relatives of passengers aboard the missing plane remain in limbo after the first physical link emerges between Flight MH370 and its disappearance in March 2014.
Though a wing part was confirmed as a piece of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, it could take more time to solve the mystery of the plane's disappearance.
"Malaysia will always remember and honor those who were lost," the country's prime minister said as he confirmed that debris found last week belonged to the missing plane.
In a speech, Najib Razak offered condolences and thanked those who participated in the search for the missing jetliner.
An Australian agency in charge of the search operation said a more recent model's predictions were in line with the discovery of debris on a French island in the Indian Ocean.
A piece of plastic discovered Tuesday may be part of a plane window, police said amid a search for clues to a Malaysia Airlines jet's disappearance.
Authorities are awaiting a report from France, which is leading the investigation into a flaperon’s possible link to the missing Flight MH370.
Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, carrying 239 people on board, disappeared in March 2014.
Réunion Island in the Indian Ocean has become the focus of the investigation into the disappearance of Flight MH370.