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2006-06-29 12:49:14 · 14 answers · asked by pontingmy 1 in Cars & Transportation Aircraft

14 answers

Yes

2006-06-29 12:54:04 · answer #1 · answered by 69 FstBck 4 · 0 0

Yes. What may be behind the mysterious disappearance of ships and planes in the Bermuda Triangle is pirate activity or active underground volcanos discharging huge bubbles of gas. If a ship (or even a plane) is unfortunate enough to be above a large gas bubble (considerably larger than the ship itself), it will go to the bottom. Other ships, like the Witchcraft, may have been taken by pirates, the crew murdered and the ship re-numbered and sold in Mexico or elsewhere.

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2006-06-29 23:52:54 · answer #2 · answered by H 7 · 0 0

I have flown over the Bermuda triangle many, many times. I also have my third mate and third assistant engineer's licenses. The reason why ships have gone down so many times in the Bermuda triangle is because there are pockets of natural gas close to the crust of the earth under the seabed below. They have a tendency to escape and because these pockets of natural gas are quite a bit less dense than the water, they quickly go up to the surface of the water. Ships are buoyant because they displace a mass of water that is equal to the mass that they are currently at. A more massive ship means more water has to be displaced. This is why if you load a ship down, it sinks a little. When going over a blob of natural gas instead of water, a ship will then be required to displace more volume of natural gas in order to displace the same amount of mass of water because the natural gas is less dense. In some cases, the amount of natural gas that would have to be displaced is greater than the ship is capable of doing. It then sinks.

2006-06-29 13:45:43 · answer #3 · answered by Kelley S 3 · 0 0

i only said a documentry. the gulf flow consists of wrecks. so as that they are infrequently positioned the position they sank so some say wrecks are not any more got here upon, yet many wrecks were got here upon. there are rouge waves that sink ships in minutes or a lot less, so ships do not have any time to call for help. and vanish with no hint. the sea floor produces a particular gas that motives digital controls to malfunction. so planes get disoriented. what's the freaky component is one pilot suggested that he become flying and a typhoon occured so he flew right into a tunnel like area between the clouds. then he suggested he felt strange, like there become no gravity. only for a less than a minute. he flew out of the tunnel like component, he become over Miami. to bypass from the position he become to Miami in the era of time he concept he become in the air, he would ought to have traveled more advantageous than 1500mph, even besides the undeniable fact that his airplane can in uncomplicated phrases fly at 200mph. he suggested Charles Lindburge, a sought after aviator from 1900s also wrote about this strange experience in a e book. the instruct i watched touched on the challenge of darkish power, and the bending of time and area. its all speculative.

2016-11-15 10:51:36 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I read that there is a magnetic filed underneath, which is the cause for plans going down. Also, compasses inside of the Bermuda Triangle do not work because of this magnetic field.

2006-06-29 12:53:20 · answer #5 · answered by Yesenia M 1 · 0 0

Yes, I've been snorkeling in the Bermuda Triangle with no dire effects. There were lots of sunken ships, no sunken airplanes.

2006-06-29 12:55:44 · answer #6 · answered by Eschew Obfuscation 4 · 0 0

Yes, they do it all the time.

Modern aircraft are not navigated using a compass any more. The compass is there as a last resort and for aligning other systems prior to takeoff if needed. There are numerous types of navigation systems in use including VOR, RNAV, inertial navigation systems and GPS just to name a few. None of these are influenced by anomalies in the earth's magnetic field.

2006-06-29 16:38:04 · answer #7 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

Yes. I have done it many times. It is no different from any other stretch of airspace; accidents happen everywhere from time to time. And as other users were saying, compasses are still in aircraft, but they are not used for navigation, at least in commercial airliners.

2006-07-01 10:13:25 · answer #8 · answered by Bunaby A 1 · 0 0

Yes, but when I went over it the plane started acting weird. Very rough turbulence, rapid drops in altitude, that sort of thing.

2006-06-29 12:56:20 · answer #9 · answered by macrosfear 2 · 0 0

Yes, they fly over and through it many times every day.

2006-06-29 13:00:47 · answer #10 · answered by David P 1 · 0 0

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