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Bermuda Triangle

Devil's Triangle

By Akshata KharelPublished 3 years ago 4 min read
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The Bermuda Triangle has produced fictional films, television shows, novels, and pop songs about the mysterious disappearance of ships and aircraft over the years, but experts say the disappearance does not occur in this part of the Atlantic, but in smaller parts of the ocean, according to The History Channel. Many speculative theories have been made about the Bermuda Triangle, but none of them have proved that the shipwreck occurred in some of the farthest reaches of the Atlantic. An unexplained geomagnetic anomaly can cause roaming problems that confuse pilots and cause them to fall into the sea while being trained to fly safely. However, the loss of electronic navigation is another unexplained belief in the disappearance of ships.

Some think that mysterious and mysterious forces cause the mysterious disappearance of ships, planes, and people, such as aliens who kidnap people to study, the influence of the lost Atlantis continent, the vortices sucking objects of some magnitude, and other strange ideas. Some fossils have indeed been found in the Sargasso Sea, a maritime center between Bermuda and the Caribbean, where deadly waters are the result of circular ocean currents crossing the North Atlantic instead of intense activity. Recent scientific theories about this infamous triangle suggest, however, that the strange disappearance of ships and aircraft is the result of huge amounts of methane from the oceans.

For decades, the legend of the Bermuda Triangle fascinated people with the mysterious disappearance of ships, planes, and people. The Bermuda Triangle is a legend in the Atlantic Ocean, bordering Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico, where scores of ships and planes disappeared mysteriously.

There are reports of ships and planes have met with a tragic end after crossing the triangle. In an emergency, the U.S. military pilot became confused as he crossed the Atlantic Ocean legend on the border of Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico. Flights were never found.

An article published by Edward Van Winkle Jones in the Miami Herald with the Associated Press on September 17, 1950, was the first to cover a common triangle and unusual disappearance in the Bermuda region and the first to highlight something supernatural in Flight 19. While author Vincent Gaddis naming the "Bermuda Triangle" in a 1964 issue of the magazine, there were other unforeseen accidents in the area, including three passenger planes that crashed all of them without sending their messages. Kusche published his best-known book, Bermuda Triangle Mystery Solved, in 1975. The book is the result of his extensive research on the many events [50] that took place in the Triangle between 1840 and 1973.

Vincent Gaddis published 1964 his book The Deadly Bermuda Triangle, in which he presented his accounts and secret ideas for the Bermuda Triangle and described the five Avenger bombs that disappeared under air conditions. Benjamin Radford, author and research scientist, pointed out in a triangular speech that it is difficult to find lost aircraft at sea despite extensive searches in the area, but that the disappearance is a mystery does not make them strange or mysterious. Statistically, the number of ships and aircraft not reported in the triangle is not as high as in other parts of the ocean.

Lloyds of London was asked about the large number of ships sinking in the Bermuda Triangle in the Bermuda Triangle (1992) television program of the British Channel 4, produced by John Simmons of the Geofilms Equinox Series for shipping insurance on the market. When asked by Channel 4 in 1992, they noted that there was an "unusual number" of ships in the area "that was submerged or lost," but they replied that it was not, as usual, a large number compared to other maritime areas.

The Bermuda Triangle is part of the North Atlantic from North America were more than 50 ships and 20 planes are believed to have disappeared. The area is triangular and marks the Atlantic coast of Florida and the Panhandle of the United States between Bermuda and the Great Antilles. The history of what we now call the Bermuda Triangle began 56 years ago in 1964 when American author Vincent Gaddis used the term in the magazine Argosy for the first time to describe the triangular area of ​​the Atlantic off the coast of the American state of Florida.

The Bermuda Triangle is an unimaginable triangular area in the western part of the North Atlantic that was unloaded by many ships passed by planes but disappeared in the last century. It was also called Devil's Triangle, Limbo, Lost Twilight Zone, Hoodoo Seas, and Apex, which was described as Bermuda, the southernmost tip of Florida, San Juan, Puerto Rico, and the area between the Chesapeake Bay and Miami borders.

The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, describes a region northwest of the North Atlantic where mysterious aircraft and ships are believed to have disappeared. It is located in the vicinity of Bermuda, Florida, and Puerto Rico, where ships and planes are said to disappear into the air or in deep water.

Mystery
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Akshata Kharel

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