The answer depends entirely on where you're coming from and where in Europe you're going. If you're flying from NYC to London, for example, you won't come near that fabled triangle. But take heed, you might be in greater peril than you know. If your flight strays over the Great Lakes, you'll enter an area roughly five times more dangerous than the Bermuda Triangle. That's right, five times more dangerous if not more than that. The Great Lakes have seen just as many mysterious disappearances as the triangle over the same length of time. Only get this, the lakes is an area 1/10th the size of the Bermuda Triangle. So really, the odds of disappearing over the lakes are much higher than over the triangle. If you're seeing anything from this and the other answers, it's that the Devil's Triangle might very well exist, but has had no more unexplained disappearances than anywhere else. I've been right inside the Bermuda Triangle several times (Bahamas is in there), and it's one of the nicest places in the world.
2016-05-23 01:52:57
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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There aren't set boundaries to the Bermuda Triangle.
2006-12-06 09:58:48
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answer #3
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answered by Phoenix, Wise Guru 7
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