Barmuda triangle

  1. Inside the Myths and Mysteries of Bermuda Triangle Disappearances
  2. Gallery: Lost in the Bermuda Triangle
  3. What Is the Bermuda Triangle? A Scientist Has Solved the Mystery
  4. Bermuda Triangle Facts
  5. 7 Chilling Conspiracy Theories About the Bermuda Triangle


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Inside the Myths and Mysteries of Bermuda Triangle Disappearances

• The Bermuda Triangle, a stretch of the Atlantic Ocean running between Puerto Rico, Bermuda, and Miami has been credited with the deaths and disappearances of over 8,000 lives since the mid-19th century. • Though the exact number is not known, at least 50 ships and 20 airplanes have disappeared in the Triangle — often without a trace. • The Bermuda Triangle has become the subject of endless legends, myths, and conspiracies. We're breaking down some of the biggest ones. • Some have called it Others have referred to it as Limbo of the Lost or the Hoodoo Sea. But to most, it is the Bermuda Triangle, a stretch of water in the Atlantic Ocean known to swallow ships and vanish planes. For centuries the Though the US government does not recognize the Bermuda Triangle as an actual Image of a foggy ship at sea. Shutterstock When the Seeing this as an opportunity to seize valuable cargo, they sent some of their men in to occupy the ship and sail the remaining journey side by side. But a wicked storm quickly separated the two ships, and when they were reunited the next day, there wasn't a trace of the crew in sight. The ship was once more abandoned but left packed with valuable resources, so the captain of the Ellen Austin tried boarding it again. But when crew members got aboard for the second time, a thick and blinding fog rolled in and separated the ships. When the fog finally cleared, the "ghost" ship had completely vanished, The USS Cyclops which disappeared in Bermuda when it c...

Gallery: Lost in the Bermuda Triangle

(Image credit: Carloscastilla | Dreamstime) Before losing radio contact off the coast of southern Florida, Flight 19's flight leader was reportedly heard saying: "Everything looks strange, even the ocean," and "We are entering white water, nothing seems right." The aircrafts and 14 crew members were never found, despite a lengthy investigation by the government. In fact, a search-and-rescue aircraft with 13 men onboard was dispatched to locate the missing planes, but that aircraft and its passengers also inexplicably disappeared. And thus, the Bermuda Triangle's (Image credit: Avro) The Bermuda Triangle is believed to be responsible for the mysterious disappearance of more than 50 ships and 20 airplanes over the past century, according to the U.S. Navy. The G-AGRE Star Ariel, a passenger aircraft owned by British South American Airways, went missing on Jan. 17, 1949. The plane had been flying over the Bermuda Triangle while making its way from Kindley Field in Bermuda to Kingston, Jamaica. Weather conditions at the time of the disappearance had been calm and fair, and no wreckage was ever found. All seven crew members and 13 passengers were lost. (Image credit: U.S. Coast Guard) The SS Marine Sulphur Queen, a converted T2 tanker ship carrying molten sulfur (sulphur is the British spelling of sulfur) and 39 crew members, disappeared near the southern coast of Florida. It was last heard from on Feb. 4, 1963, when it sent a routine radio message. When it failed to make furthe...

What Is the Bermuda Triangle? A Scientist Has Solved the Mystery

• An Australian scientist says probabilities are the leading cause of the Bermuda Triangle disappearances. And he’s not the only one. • Add in suspect weather, and iffy plane and boat piloting, and Karl Kruszelnicki believes there’s no reason to believe in the Bermuda Triangle phenomenon. • While the conspiracy of the Bermuda Triangle has existed for decades, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association and Lloyd’s of London has long championed the same ideas. Pick any one of the more than 50 ships or 20 planes that have disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle in the last century. Each one has a story without an ending, leading to a litany of Australian scientist Karl Kruszelnicki, along with the United States’ own National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA), don’t subscribe to the Bermuda Triangle’s supernatural reputation. Both have been saying for years that there’s really no Bermuda Triangle mystery. In fact, the loss and disappearance of ships and planes is a mere fact of probabilities. Related Stories • Why You Believe In Conspiracy Theories • Is the Denver Airport Run by the Illuminati? • 7 Conspiracy Theories About the Bermuda Triangle “There is no evidence that mysterious disappearances occur with any greater frequency in the Bermuda Triangle than in any other large, well-traveled area of the ocean,” NOAA And since 2017, Kruszelnicki has been saying the same thing. The Independent that the sheer volume of traffic—in a tricky area to navigate, no less—shows...

Bermuda Triangle Facts

The Information Architects of Encyclopaedia Britannica Did You Know? • The Bermuda Triangle has heavy daily traffic that travels perfectly safely through the area. • Charles Berlitz popularized the idea of the Bermuda Triangle in his best-selling book "The Bermuda Triangle," published in 1974, in which he claimed that Atlantis was involved. • Theories, some less credible than others, of why ships and planes disappear in the Bermuda Triangle include aliens, crystals from Atlantis, black holes, time warps, and methane gas. • The phrase "Bermuda Triangle" was created in 1964 by author Vincent Gaddis in Argosy, a pulp magazine. Photos

7 Chilling Conspiracy Theories About the Bermuda Triangle

• The Bermuda Triangle, located in the South Atlantic between Florida, Puerto Rico, and Bermuda, is thought to be an epicenter of shipwrecks and • Theories behind the rash of tragedies run the gamut from supernatural causes, like rogue waves. • According to the U.S. Coast Guard and NOAA, there is no evidence that ships or planes disappear more frequently in the Bermuda Triangle than they do anywhere else in the world. Fourteen men in five torpedo bombers. Thirty-one passengers aboard a All are victims of the so-called “Bermuda Triangle” (see sidebar), an area of the South Atlantic bounded by Miami, Florida; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and the island of Bermuda. The first mention of the Bermuda Triangle—sometimes called the Devil’s Triangle—came in 1964, when a writer named Vincent Gaddis cataloged the many catastrophes that had taken place there since the late 1800s in a pulp magazine called Argosy. Ten years later, best-selling book about it, aptly named The Bermuda Triangle, which went on to sell more than million copies. 🌊 You love our weird world. So do we. Since then, the Bermuda Triangle has taken up permanent residence in our Atlantis It was Charles Berlitz himself who forwarded the idea that the lost city of Atlantis was somehow responsible for the shipwrecks and plane crashes in the Bermuda Triangle. Since then, others have piled on to this theory, arguing that technology developed by Atlanteans—including crystal energies—is still active on the Atlantis isn’t real. Do ...