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Footage has emerged from a private yacht which has joined the search team, as Duncan Kennedy reports
The families of four British sailors who are missing in the Atlantic say they remain hopeful they will be found.
Speaking after a meeting at the Foreign Office, relatives said they were "very positive" and felt everything possible was being done to find the men.
Foreign Office minister Hugh Robertson thanked the US Coast Guard "for their significant efforts".
It comes after debris was spotted near to where the 40ft Cheeki Rafiki disappeared.
The captain of a catamaran helping in the search said details had been passed to the US Coast Guard, but did not know if the debris was part of the UK boat.
The Cheeki Rafiki, based in Southampton, was sailing back to the UK from Antigua when it went missing.
The search for the vessel was originally called off on Sunday but resumed on Tuesday.
'Right behind us'The four missing crew members are Paul Goslin, 56, from West Camel, Somerset; skipper Andrew Bridge, 22, from Farnham; Steve Warren, 52, from Bridgwater; and 22-year-old James Male, from Romsey.
Graham Male, James's father, said the meeting with Foreign Office officials was "very constructive".
"It really filled the families in with detail," he said. "What we can say is that the UK government and the US Coast Guard are right behind us, which we are so grateful for."
Mr Male said he had been told more resources were heading to the search area and thanked everyone for their support.
He added: "The boys will be positive out there and the families are positive."
Cressida Goslin, Mr Goslin's wife, described the search efforts as "wonderful" and said: "I don't think anyone could be doing anything more than they are."
Patrick Michel, skipper of the Malisi, one of the volunteer crews searching for the missing yacht, said he had reported the positions of the debris and the time they were spotted to the US Coast Guard.
Mr Michel said a plank of wood, which could be a floorboard or part of a table, and a plastic board had been seen.
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme he did not know for certain what the items were but said "the grouping of these debris in the northern part of the search area could indicate that they are recent".
He added: "Until we get feedback from the owner who knows the boat, nothing can be confirmed."
The US Coast Guard confirmed it had received the report, but could not say for certain that the debris was from the Cheeki Rafiki as there were no identifying marks.
It said it took the information "very seriously" and would incorporate it into its search planning.
'Keep looking'Foreign Office minister Hugh Robertson said of his meeting with the families: "The UK government remains in constant contact with our US colleagues and I was able to update them on the continuing search.
"I'd like to thank the US Coast Guard for their significant efforts thus far, and to assure everybody that the UK government will continue to do everything possible to try and locate these missing yachtsmen."
The relatives are due to visit the US Embassy later.
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Relatives of the Cheeki Rafiki's crew say they hope satellite imagery will be released so it can be studied by members of the public
The families, who took letters of thanks to the prime minister and foreign secretary for their efforts so far, said they hoped people would be able to join the search online using satellite technology.
Mr Warren's partner, Gloria Hamlet, said: "If there are eyes out there looking for them then there's a chance.
"Hopefully today will be the day but we've got to wait and see."
Coastguards said on Wednesday that about 9,000 square miles had been searched and there had been no sightings of a life-raft, debris or a boat during the day.
'Exhausting'An RAF Hercules has joined the three planes and six ships already deployed to search the area where the sailors are thought to have disappeared - approximately 1,000 miles east of Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
A number of yachts have also joined the search.
The decision to resume the search followed an official request from the UK government. An online petition, set up to urge the US Coast Guard to resume the search, attracted more than 200,000 signatures.
US Coast Guard Capt Anthony Popiel has said no decision has been taken on when to suspend the search, and pledged that teams would continue to hunt for the Britons as if they were "looking for a member of our own family".
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