The Bermuda Triangle Mystery

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Bermuda_Triangle
Disappearances in the infamous Bermuda Triangle and some other areas have caused fear of UFOs, mysterious vortexes, time portals and sea monsters. Some of them just defy conventional explanations and fall in the murky category of unexplained phenomena.
Here are some stories of missing aircraft, and crewless or vanished ships fill the literature of the mysteries of seafaring and high-flying individuals who lost their lives from unexplained causes:
  • 1918: The U.S.S. Cyclops, a World War I Navy vessel, is refueling ships in the south Atlantic Ocean. After stopping in Barbados, the ship, with more than 300 passengers and crew aboard, vanishes without a trace in the Bermuda Triangle.
  • 1945: During a training exercise, five U.S. Navy planes disappear in the same Bermuda Triangle area. Adding more mystery to the incident, a search aircraft sent to find the lost planes also unexplainably vanishes.
  • 1950: A Northwest Airlines flight — with 55 passengers and three crew members — is en route to Minneapolis from New York City when it apparently simply drops out of sight while passing over what’s known today as the Michigan Triangle.
  • 1955: Nine ships disappear from an area of the Pacific Ocean about 60 miles south of Tokyo. Another ship sent to find them also vanishes. This has been dubbed The Devil’s Sea.
All of the above cases involve ships or planes that mysteriously vanished and the explanations of those incidents may seem as diverse as the number of cases themselves:
  • Unexpected severe weather conditions
  • Pilot or captain error
  • Pirates or kidnappers
  • Methane gas buildups capable of sinking a ship without warning
Numerous smaller ships and planes have disappeared in the decades following the 1940s after often reporting disturbances causing compasses, radios and other instruments to malfunction.
And yet, according to the United States Coast Guard, the Bermuda Triangle is much ado about nothing.
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