The Gaddis Argosy article delineated the boundaries of the triangle,[9] giving its vertices as Miami; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and Bermuda. Subsequent writers did not necessarily follow this definition.[16] Some writers gave different boundaries and vertices to the triangle, with the total area varying from 1.3 to 3.9 million km2 (0.50 to 1.51 million sq mi).[16] "Indeed, some writers even stretch it as far as the Irish coast."[2] Consequently, the determination of which accidents occurred inside the triangle depends on which writer reported them.[16]
The sail training ship HMS Atalanta (originally named HMS Juno) disappeared with her entire crew after setting sail from the Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda for Falmouth, England on 31 January 1880.[45] It was presumed that she sank in a powerful storm which crossed her route a couple of weeks after she sailed, and that her crew being composed primarily of inexperienced trainees may have been a contributing factor. The search for evidence of her fate attracted worldwide attention at the time (connection is also often made to the 1878 loss of the training ship HMS Eurydice, which foundered after departing the Royal Naval Dockyard in Bermuda for Portsmouth on 6 March), and she was alleged decades later to have been a victim of the mysterious triangle, an allegation resoundingly refuted by the research of author David Francis Raine in 1997.[46][47][48][49][50]
Several bizarre theories have been presented in attempts to explain the disappearances. UFO abductions, time warps, portals leading to other dimensions, magnetic field anomalies, geophysical phenomena and massive methane gas bubbles have all been blamed for the triangle's unsolved mysteries. A popular theory is that the legendary lost city of Atlantis rests at the bottom of the Bermuda Triangle, and its advanced technology interferes with nearby vessels.
In actuality, the number of disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle is consistent with any other well-traveled region. There's no evidence to show that the area experiences an unusually high number of lost vessels. The region is vulnerable to unpredictable storms, with the majority of Atlantic hurricanes and tropical storms passing through the triangle. And, according to the Navy, the Gulf Stream there can cause swift, violent changes in weather, and its currents "can quickly erase any evidence of a disaster."
Thus was a legend born. The Bermuda Triangle is an area roughly bounded by Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico. No one keeps statistics, but in the last century, numerous ships and planes have simply vanished without a trace within the imaginary triangle.
However, Feit pointed out, the Gulf Stream travels along the western edge of the triangle and could be a factor. The Gulf Stream is like a 40- to 50-mile-wide (64- to 80-kilometer-wide) river within the ocean that circulates in the North Atlantic Ocean. The warm water and two- to four-knot currents can create weather patterns that remain channeled within it.
Stick to the crow's nest and avoid this region, which, as legend has it, can perform quite the vanishing act. The Bermuda Triangle, in the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean, is a region of mystery where numerous ships and aircraft have inexplicably disappeared. One example is the SS Cotopaxi, which went missing in 1925. Rumors about the triangle were built around such losses, but in 2020, the shipwreck's remnants were discovered near St. Augustine, Florida, providing some closure. Investigations indicate that many losses in the Bermuda Triangle, including the Cotopaxi, can likely be attributed to unpredictable weather and heavy maritime and air traffic, dispelling many of the myths and legends that shroud this area. The simple truth is if a lot of shipping is going through one area, there will be more emergencies that happen there in comparison with less utilized shipping and flight paths.
However, the mysterious behaviour of the region came to the public attention only in the 20th century when the Navy cargo ship, USS Cyclops, with more than 300 people on board, went missing in the Bermuda triangle. The latest incident in the region is the disappearance of a small twin-engine plane in May this year.
Possibly one of the most mysterious stories of shipwrecks, this ship is a tale of its own. Despite being found adrift in some other location in the Atlantic Ocean, the connection to the Bermuda triangle had been somehow invoked to find an answer to the mystery of its fate.
It is an unnerving triangle mystery associated with the American white oak schooner Ellen Austin. In 1881, the 210 feet long Ellen Austin was going to New York from London when she stumbled upon a derelict near the Bermuda Triangle. Everything seemed fine with the unidentified schooner drifting just north of the Sargasso Sea, but the missing crew.
This is just because of diffrent oceanic currents which have their flow in north atlantic region or bermuda triangle. Actualy what happens, these currents flows in clockwise & anticlock wise in an area ofaround 5000 sq. km. They creates creates a large whirl in this region due to various georaphical & climetological phenomena.Reason of disappearences is this .
For deep understanding see atlas & any reserch paper on this
there izz h big nd scary story about this mistoury I think that there were a king nd he made this triangle 4 his shap aur this triangle was a shapit triangle so that no one can become stronger than this triangle nd no one can challenge this mysterious place that he can stay out if it
aftr going this place!
Bruce along with his association started researching the issue for an answer, he even consulted the aeronautical engineers and professors for this, but nobody can provide a solution to this problem. So, Bruce decided to document this story on his own and came with a book known as beyond the Bermuda triangle.
Satellite weather images showing honeycomb cloud patterns, like those above the Bermuda Triangle, are strange to see, but not uncommon. These open and closed cells occur when cold, dry air mixes over warm water.
Welcome! I'm Jen. Wife, mother, television addict & reviewer. This blog focuses primarily on Arrow and Olicity.
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Disclaimer: Any gifs on the blog are not mine. If you would like a gif removed from my reviews, please message me. Indexreturn home Message ask me anything Reviews & ReactionsArrow and more! Support The BlogBuy me cup of tea Top Poststhe best of the best SpoilersArrow spoilers The Bermuda Triangle: Arrow 1x13 Review (Betrayal)Time to deal with this love triangle and all the ways it isawful.
I frequently say to myself as I rewatch Season 1 that the triangle makes sense in theory. Thewriters have all the components, albeit clichéd, that should create a love trianglefull of juicy drama.
Regardless of whether the loss of HMS Eurydice in 1878 and the disappearance of HMS Atalanta in 1880 were, as some claimed, the result of the influence of a mysterious triangle (whose vertices were said to be Miami, Bermuda and San Juan), or simply the result of explainable events, the stage was set for an enduring urban myth.
Over the years, some ships disappeared from the triangle without trace, such as the Atalanta and USS Cyclops in 1918. Others were found adrift with crews apparently missing, such as the Connemara IV in 1955 and the Carroll A. Deering in 1921.
Planes weren't immune to the rumored power of the mysterious triangle, either. In 1945 Flight 19, a group of five TBM Avenger torpedo bombers, disappeared, along with a PBM Mariner with a crew of 13 deployed to search for the missing aircraft. In 1948, a Douglas DC-3 and the British South American Airways Star Tiger plane disappeared without trace. In 1949 they were followed in a vacuum by the BSAA Star Ariel aircraft.
But the effects attributed to the Bermuda Triangle were not limited to disappearances. Aircraft and ship instruments were also affected (according to some, thanks to advanced technology from the lost continent of Atlantis). Was this the cause of the alleged collision and crash into the Atlantic of two USAF Stratotanker aircraft in 1963?
We are unable to explain the strange events in the Bermuda Triangle, but we are pleased to present a new Uncharted Color inspired by the impenetrable blue-green depths of the Atlantic and the inexplicable events that took place there.
Enigmatic and highly evocative, our Bermuda Triangle infuses any project with an inexplicable charm.
A scientist at Sydney University in Australia may have a logical explanation for the Bermuda Triangle. Despite being a hotbed for disappearances over the years, Karl Kruszelnicki says the triangle has a similar percentage of missing planes and boats compared to other places in the world, especially when looking at how much traffic passes through the area.blogherads.adq.push(function () blogherads.defineSlot( 'medrec', 'gpt-dsk-ros-mid-article-uid0' ).setTargeting( 'pos', ["mid-article","mid-article1"] ).setTargeting( 'viewable', 'yes' ).setSubAdUnitPath("ros\/mid-article").addSize([[300,250],[2,2],[2,4],[4,2]]););
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