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You are assuming that there is something unusual about the Bermuda triangle. You have been lied to. There is nothing unusual about the area.

1. Despite reports of compass variations in the area, there is nothing unusual about that or the area itself. Magnetic Island off the coast of Australia was so named by James Cook in 1770 because it caused his ship's compass to vary from the usual. Even then that was understood to be due to iron ore deposits or similar geological features.

2. The leader of Flight 19 was known to be a poor navigator. He had got lost at least twice before and had been rescued, losing a valuable aircraft. The day he died, he took several other inexperienced pilots with him, having got them thoroughly lost as well. It is surprising that he was still allowed to fly over water.

3. The plane that exploded during the search was of a type that had exploded in mid-air more than once before.

4. The number of ships, planes and boats actually lost within the triangle is no greater on average than any other part of the sea with similar amounts and types of traffic.

5. Some of the smaller boats that have been reported (by liars) to have been lost in the triangle have actually been lost off the coast of Portugal, Ireland and in one case, California, in another ocean. Many others have been lost dozens of miles from the triangle, mostly close to the Florida coast and some which have been included in the losses turned up a few days late - engine breakdown, not enough wind, decided to stay on a few more days.

6. The myth originated in a series of newspaper and cheap magazine articles but was really pushed by Charles Berlitz in 1964, who also wrote books about Atlantis and other subjects where information is unreliable to say the least.

http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/comment/bermuda.

Almost all of the ships boats and planes that pass through come out unscathed. There would hardly be a ship master or a commercial aircraft pilot who believes in the Bermuda triangle story.

It has been debunked so many times that is is not even funny anymore. But the media does not usually run debunk stories. So your local TV station will not run the "The Bermuda Triangle Hoax" anytime soon.

The Bermuda triangle story is a hoax to sell paperback woo-woo books, cheap magazines and rubbish television programs. It is a tissues of a few facts and an orchestrated litany of lies.

2007-06-23 14:02:19 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 5 6

Bermuda Triangle Survivor

2016-11-12 19:58:44 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Has anyone ever made it through the Bermuda Triangle?

2015-08-16 23:50:46 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Bermuda Triangle is the area between the tip of Florida, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico. It is not the busiest shipping lane in the world, but between recreational boaters, commercial traffic and military ships, hundreds of thousands of people go into and out of the Triangle every year.

2007-06-23 13:31:23 · answer #4 · answered by ahoff 2 · 0 0

Below The Bermuda triangle there are pyramides made by the Atlantis people, they were actually one of the races that populated earth, it was a high tecnologhy civilization, they had colonys in Mars...they have made pyamides there(REad about the face in Mars, it was made by earth people, Atlantis people); those pyramides below the Bermuda TRiangle were actually electromagnetic centrals, power and energy, someday we will control the energy that lays there

2007-06-23 13:28:28 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 6 1

Well, considering that the US Navy sends hundreds of ships a year in and out of it's bases in Norfolk, VA, and Charleston, SC right through the BT, I would say yes.

2007-06-23 13:31:06 · answer #6 · answered by lunatic 7 · 3 0

Yeah I did many times and so does thousands of people a year. It is the water of the Atlantic off Miami, FL and the Keys.

2007-06-23 16:18:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

yes on a plane from NY to Bermuda and back
I am still here to write about it

2007-06-23 13:30:34 · answer #8 · answered by Michael M 7 · 3 0

Not personally but my folks have flown a small Cessna through there several times, and really don't have anything exciting to say about it.

2007-06-23 13:28:26 · answer #9 · answered by nowyermessingwithasonofabitch 4 · 2 1

Some of the busiest shipping lanes run right through it. Go figure...

2007-06-23 13:27:26 · answer #10 · answered by AK 6 · 8 0

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