Experts believe 2,000-pound bombs were used in deadly Israeli strike in Al Mawasi, Gaza
It is possible 2,000-pound bombs were used in deadly Israeli strike in the humanitarian area of Al Mawasi in Gaza on Sept. 10, two experts told ABC News.
At least 19 people were killed and 60 others were injured in the attack, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.
Videos and photo captured from the site of the deadly strike show two large craters with fabric and debris buried in the sand. A photo captured by Quds News Network shows what appears to be a conical-shaped missile fragment.
The remnant of a missile recovered from the site and large craters suggest the most likely munition used to conduct the attack was "a 2,000-pound-class air-delivered bomb fitted with an Israeli-made SPICE 2000 guidance kit," N.R. Jenzen-Jones, director of the consultancy Armament Research Services, told ABC News.
Satellite imagery captured the day before the attack show a cluster of a dozen tents at the location of the strike in the densely populated Al Mawasi area. Imagery captured after the attack shows the temporary structures are nowhere to be seen, replaced instead by two large craters, one measuring almost 46 feet in length.
The craters are consistent with "multiple MK-84s which are 2,000 pounds" and "the fragment recovered appears to be from a Spice-2,000 bomb guidance kit tail section," Trevor Ball, a former US Army EOD specialist, told ABC News after reviewing the photos and satellite imagery.
The United Nations' Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said the kill radius of a 2,000-pound bomb is almost 110 feet.
-ABC News' Chris Looft