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Is the ships disappearing phenomenan true? Is that still there or it has been resolved/successfully investigated?

2007-01-03 02:02:05 · 3 answers · asked by RG 1 in Environment

3 answers

The Bermuda was made popular by a guy named Berlitz I believe in a book called "Invisible Residents" When the revenue stream ran out on that one, he invented another (and of course a book) called the Dragon's Triangle off the coast of Japan.

Read the Book "The Bermuda Triangle Mystery Solved" by Lawrence David Kusche. He actually did real research. Berlitz talks about a row boat disappearing on a calm night near Miami and After Kusche looked in the paper for the weather that night in history, the wind was blowing at 35 mph and there were small craft warnings out. There are many more examples. The Triangle is all a hoax.

2007-01-03 02:08:47 · answer #1 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

There is no spooky "force" that causes ships, planes, and people to simply vanish. The regional weather in that area has long been known to wreak havac on navigational instruments as well as the horizon at sea mixed with weather phenomenom can quite easily cause problems for pilots. The sea is a very very nasty beast, when you combine that with unstable weather conditions and then fly small planes at relatively low altitude right through the middle of it, you're going to have problems.

2007-01-03 10:11:26 · answer #2 · answered by georgestrait66 3 · 0 0

The mystery is that someone made a lot of money selling books about a non existing phenomena.

2007-01-03 10:08:37 · answer #3 · answered by Vincent G 7 · 0 0

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