Methane under the crust is sometimes released into the water.When hits the top of the water explodes due to compression. They did a test and a whole battleship blew to pieces. Methane also makes the instruments for height tell you that you're rising. Also the storms they have( which is often) Throw compasses off. So when a pilot in a storm sees his elevation meter tell him hes accelerating hard up and his compass is spinning it seems as through he is corkscrewing up. So he would like any of us start to panic.(If your plane goes to high there is not enough air to fly and your plane would fall like a rock to the ground.) So this pilot is freaking out, he is presumably corkscrewing into the air. So he goes into a dive and spins to set the plane level (on his instruments hes level.) but really he is corkscrewing straight down. All the storms make it to where you depend on instruments to fly. (it's really dark and cloudy. You have to fly through the clouds. And storms over the bemuda just pop up.) When he breaks through the clouds and sees the water that hes falling right at he will scream.(most likely his last.) Becuase if your falling fast and hard like that you don't have a chance to level. So this pilot is in a corkscrewing free fall. He pulls up screaming and the plane pulls up a little but due to inertia he still falls. And now grieve for this pilot who shoots at 440 mph into the water at a slight angle. At that speed he would have died instantly and painlessly. That is why so many die flying and sailing over it. But now the sailor part. Our ship master is just cruising over the water when it disappears and bubbles of highly flammable methane float up. Our ship master who is smoking is engulfed in flames as the pressure differnces blow the hull and deck to shreds.Grieve once more as our ship master now in flames is thrown up into the air and blown apart. That is accurately how you would die if a huge methane bubble floats up.(which is frequent.)
2007-04-17 14:29:58
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answer #1
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answered by super_confused_dude 1
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The triangle is arbitrary. Ships and aircraft have been know to disappear in all parts of the ocean.
These often go unexplained. But, let's face it, that's a BIG ocean out there. There is nothing mysterious about not locating wreckage.
A case in point. A story went around in the 50's that a fleet of aircraft disappeared over the Bermuda Triangle just before sending the radio message: "Don't try to rescue us, they look like they're from outer space." Isn't that heroic! Not wanting to rescued and all.
Years later, an interview was done of the people people in the control tower who were still alive. Nobody remembered anything like that. I would think a message about aliens prior to a disappearance would be remembered for life.
2007-04-17 03:21:11
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answer #2
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answered by Groucho 2
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The Bermuda Triangle section has many thoughts of ships and planes disappearing there. I truly have performed a touch bit study on it and evidently that section is very stormy. Ships and planes ought to lose communique contained in the storms and crash because of the hurricane.
2016-12-04 04:36:03
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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I dont think it is real, just a story. anyhow most planes and ships are hard to hijack, just for slaves.
The number of ships and aircraft reported missing in the area was not significantly greater, proportionally speaking, than in any other part of the ocean.
In an area frequented by tropical storms, the number of disappearances that did occur were, for the most part, neither disproportionate, unlikely, nor mysterious; furthermore, Berlitz and other writers would often fail to mention such storms.
The numbers themselves had been exaggerated by sloppy research. A boat listed as missing would be reported, but its eventual (if belated) return to port may not be reported.
Some disappearances had in fact, never happened. One plane crash was said to have taken place in 1937 off Daytona Beach, Florida, in front of hundreds of witnesses; a check of the local papers revealed nothing.
2007-04-17 03:16:35
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answer #4
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answered by Zen禅Maiden :ジェダイ 3
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Not likely. The Bermuda triangle is a ill defined area and has been a folk tale for hundreds of years.
2007-04-17 03:14:55
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answer #5
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answered by Pirate AM™ 7
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people ride cruise ships all the time through the bermuda triangle....i myself was on one....and our ship just disappeared from underneath us and we fell into the water.....j\k... I have been through it twice and nothing strange at all happened.
Most of the occuances that happen there are natural part of science.
2007-04-17 07:48:18
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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No, unfortunately I do not believe that would explain what is going on there more that just people, Ships and Airplanes
have been said to have disappeared as a result. Go here for more info: www.bermuda-triangle.org/
or here: www.unmuseum.org/triangle.htm
2007-04-17 06:18:00
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answer #7
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answered by fire937rescue 4
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I think that methane gas is burped up by the earth and when pockets of this gas are released frm the ocean that it intereferes with the mechanics of engines. I also think that maybe you had to much to drink.
2007-04-17 06:43:07
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answer #8
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answered by cici 5
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No.
I think natural forces we don't fully understand are at work.
2007-04-17 03:14:42
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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no, your so stupid its natural forces
2007-04-17 06:49:42
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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