Introduction
The Bermuda
Triangle (also known as Devil's Triangle and Devil's Sea) is a nearly
half-million square-mile (1.2 million km2) area of ocean roughly defined by
Bermuda, Puerto Rico, and the southernmost tip of Florida. This area is noted
for a high incidence of unexplained losses of ships, small boats, and
aircraft.
The Bermuda Triangle has become
popular through representation by the mass media, in which it
is a paranormal site in which the known laws of physics are either
violated, altered, or both.
While
there is a common belief that a number of ships and airplanes have disappeared
under highly unusual circumstances in this region, the United States Coast Guard
and others disagree with that assessment, citing statistics demonstrating that
the number of incidents involving lost ships and aircraft is
no larger than that of any other heavily traveled region of the world.
There is
a common belief that a number of ships and airplanes have disappeared under
highly unusual circumstances in the region called Bermuda Triangle. Over 100
airplane disappearances and over 1000 lives lost since 1945
Many of the alleged mysteries have proven not so
mysterious or unusual upon close examination, with inaccuracies and
misinformation about the cases often circulating and recirculating
over the decades.
The
triangle is an arbitrary shape, crudely marking out a corridor of the Atlantic,
stretching northward from the West Indies, along the North American
seaboard, as far as the Carolinas. In the Age of Sail, ships returning to Europe
from parts south would sail north to the Carolinas, then turn east for Europe,
taking advantage of the prevailing wind direction across the North Atlantic.
Even with the development of steam and internal-combustion engines, a great
deal more shipping traffic was (and still is) found nearer the US coastline
than towards the empty centre of the Atlantic. The Triangle also loosely
conforms with the course of the Gulf Stream as it leaves the West Indies,
and has always been an area of volatile weather. The combination of distinctly
heavy maritime traffic and tempestuous weather meant that a certain, also
distinctly large, number of vessels would flounder in storms.
Given the
historical limitations of communications technology, most of those ships that
sank without survivors would disappear without a trace. The advent of wireless
communications, radar, and satellite navigation meant that the unexplained
disappearances largely ceased at some point in the 20th Century. The occasional
vessel still sinks, but rarely without a trace. It should be noted that both
the concept and the name of the Bermuda Triangle date only to the 1960s, and
were the products of an American journalist.
Other
areas often purported to possess unusual characteristics are the Devil's Sea, located
near Japan, and the Marysburgh Vortex or the Great Lakes Triangle, located in
eastern Lake Ontario.
Bermuda (or
"Devil's") Triangle
The Bermuda Triangle (a.k.a. the Devil's
Triangle) is a triangular area in the Atlantic Ocean bounded roughly at its
points by Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico. Legend has it that many people,
ships and planes have mysteriously vanished in this area. How many have
mysteriously disappeared depends on who is doing the locating and the counting.
The size of the triangle varies from 500,000 square miles to three times that
size, depending on the imagination of the author. (Some include the Azores, the
Gulf of Mexico, and the West Indies in the "triangle.")
Some trace the mystery back to the time of Columbus. Even so, estimates range
from about 200 to no more than 1,000 incidents in the past 500 years.
Howard Rosenberg claims that in 1973 the U.S. Coast Guard answered more than
8,000 distress calls in the area and that more than 50 ships and 20 planes have
gone down in the Bermuda Triangle within the last century.
Many
theories have been given to explain the extraordinary mystery of these missing
ships and planes. Evil extraterrestrials, residue crystals from Atlantis, evil
humans with anti-gravity devices or other weird technologies, and vile vortices
from the fourth dimension are favorites among fantasy writers. Strange
magnetic fields and oceanic flatulence (methane gas from the bottom of the
ocean) are favorites among the technically-minded. Weather (thunderstorms,
hurricanes, tsunamis, earthquakes, high waves, currents, etc.) bad luck,
pirates, explosive cargoes, incompetent navigators, and other natural and
human causes are favorites among skeptical investigators.
There are
some skeptics who argue that the facts do not support the legend, that there is
no mystery to be solved, and nothing that needs explaining.The number of wrecks
in this area is not extraordinary, given its size, location and the amount of
traffic it receives. Many of the ships and planes that have been identified as
having disappeared mysteriously in the Bermuda Triangle were not in the Bermuda
Triangle at all. Investigations to date have not produced scientific evidence
of any unusual phenomena involved in the disappearances. Thus, any explanation,
including so-called scientific ones in terms of methane gas being released from
the ocean floor, magneticdisturbances, etc., are not needed. The real mystery
is how the Bermuda Triangle became a mystery at all.
The modern legend of the Bermuda
Triangle began soon after five Navy planes [Flight 19] vanished on a trainingmission during
a severe storm in 1945. The most logical theory as to why they
vanished is that lead pilot Lt. Charles Taylor’s compass failed. The trainees'
planes were not equipped with working navigational instruments.
The group was disoriented and simply, though tragically, ran out of fuel. No
mysterious forces were likely to have been involved other than the
mysterious force of gravity on planes with no fuel. It is true
that one of the rescue planes blew up shortly after take-off, but this was
likely due to a faulty gas tank rather than to any mysterious forces.
Over the years there have been dozens of articles,
books, and television programs promoting the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle.
In his study of this material, Larry Kushe found that few did any investigation
into the mystery. Rather, they passed on the speculations of their predecessors
as if they were passing on the mantle of truth. Of the many uncritical accounts
of the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle, perhaps no one has done more to create
this myth than Charles Berlitz, who had a bestseller on the subject in 1974.
After examining the 400+ page official report of the Navy Board of
Investigation of the disappearance of the Navy planes in 1945, Kushe found that
the Board wasn't baffled at all by the incident and did not mention alleged
radio transmissions cited by Berlitz in his book. According to Kushe, what
isn't misinterpreted by Berlitz is fabricated. Kushe writes: "If Berlitz
were to report that a boat were red, the chance of it being some other color is
almost a certainty." (Berlitz, by the way, did not invent the name; that
was done by Vincent Gaddis in "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle," which
appeared in the February, 1964, issue of Argosy, a magazine devoted to
fiction.)
In short,
the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle became a mystery by a kind of communal
reinforcement among uncritical authors and a willing mass media to uncritically
pass on the speculation that something mysterious is going on in the Atlantic.
Source: http://www.world-mysteries.com/
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