FILE -- This August 21, 2015 file photo shows an EgyptAir Airbus A320 with the registration SU-GCC taking off from Vienna International Airport, Austria. The cockpit voice recorder of the doomed EgyptAir plane that crashed last month killing all 66 people on board has been found and pulled out of the Mediterranean Sea, Egypt's investigation committee said on Thursday, June 16, 2016.  (AP Photo/Thomas Ranner, File)
FILE -- This August 21, 2015 file photo shows an EgyptAir Airbus A320 with the registration SU-GCC taking off from Vienna International Airport, Austria. The cockpit voice recorder of the doomed EgyptAir plane that crashed last month killing all 66 people on board has been found and pulled out of the Mediterranean Sea, Egypt's investigation committee said on Thursday, June 16, 2016. (AP Photo/Thomas Ranner, File) Credit: Thomas Ranner

Egypt said Thursday it has recovered the cockpit voice recorder from the submerged wreckage of EgyptAir Flight 804, a major breakthrough in the investigation that could help resolve the mystery of why the jetliner plunged into the Mediterranean last month and killed all 66 people aboard.

The announcement came a day after officials said they had found the wreckage of the Airbus A320 and are putting together a map of the debris on the seabed. Such images will help investigators determine whether the plane broke apart in the air or stayed intact until it struck the water, aviation experts said.

The wreckage of the Paris-to-Cairo flight is believed to be at a depth of about 9,800 feet. Previously, search crews found only small floating pieces of debris and some human remains.

The cockpit voice recorder was recovered in โ€œseveral stagesโ€ by the search vessel John Lethbridge, operated by Deep Ocean Search and equipped with a Remotely Operated Vehicle, the Egyptian Aircraft Accident Investigation Committee said.

Although designed to survive a crash and fire, the recorder had sustained damage, and only its memory unit โ€“ โ€œthe most important in the recorderโ€ โ€“ was recovered unharmed, it said, without elaborating on the extent of the damage.

โ€œThis is a great achievement in a short period of time,โ€ said Abdel-Fattah Kato, the former head of EgyptAir who is not involved in the investigation. โ€œWe are close to finding out what happened to the plane.โ€

The device, which records the pilotsโ€™ conversations and other noises from the cockpit, has been taken to the Egyptian port city of Alexandria, where it will be turned over to investigators for analysis. Experts say that it takes nearly 48 hours to retrieve information from the recorder.

Search teams will continue looking for the second so-called โ€œblack boxโ€ โ€“ the aircraftโ€™s flight data recorder, which carries such information as how a plane is functioning, including its airspeed, altitude, the status of key systems and the pilotsโ€™ actions. Both devices are kept in the tail of the plane.

The voice recorder provides investigators with cockpit interactions that โ€œadd a lot of insight into what occurred,โ€ said Anthony Roman, a pilot and president of the security consultants Roman & Associates.

But he said the search teams will also want the flight data recorder, because it will help put together a โ€œpicture of events that occurred.โ€

Flight 804 disappeared from radar about 2:45 a.m. local time on May 19 between the Greek island of Crete and the Egyptian coast.

Radar data showed the aircraft had been cruising normally in clear skies before it turned 90 degrees left, then a full 360 degrees to the right as it plummeted from 38,000 feet to 15,000 feet.

It disappeared when it was at an altitude of about 10,000 feet.