English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

10 answers

Jack P is very wrong. The occurances are not just a myth. The reasons for the occurances are what seem to be clouded in myth because they are partially unknown. Partially because there are known scientific/natural reasons for part of it. Do a little real research, man. Not just visiting strange sites written by strange people. Cases are documented by many historical and nautical societies, as well and multiple governments.

Columbus was the first documented person to discover the triangle. He reported seeing strange lights on the horizon, and a bolt of fire that fell into the sea.

Yes, people can pass through unharmed, they do every day, but occasionally some disappear. From 1492 until today there are about 170 (maybe a bit more) documented cases of unsolved disappearances...ships, small boats, airplanes...have all been lost without a trace. There are wreckages that are still at the bottom of the sea in that area, but those are documented differently (since we know where they are).

The reasons for disappearances are unknown. The reasons for the wreckages seems to be scientific. There is speculation on the exact science, but one theory is the formation of gas bubbles from the seabed that rise to the surface. Anything floating on the surface at this time is likely to drop to the bottom. This phenomenon has been documented and video taped, but I'm not sure if they have experimented with it yet in open water. I'm also not sure if they have it timed, or if its just a random occurrence of nature.

2007-08-08 01:15:44 · answer #1 · answered by Wassime 3 · 2 1

The Bermuda Triangle is an area of the Atlantic off Miami, Florida that extends to Bermuda and down through Puerto Rico...1000s of people LIVE in this area and the only dangerous thing about it are the sudden violent storms...Ponce de Leon discovered the Bermuda Triangle and Florida...

2007-08-08 02:37:13 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Columbus was probably the first European explore to document anything there but as to passing through it, people pass through it every day. Several Island nations are within it and thousands of ships, boats and planes pass through it every month. To date about 50 ships and 20 aircraft have been lost in that region and that is enough to be unusual but its right off the coast of both Florida and Cuba so you can imagine that far more make it safely then disappear.

2007-08-08 01:02:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

No thats part is not true.. There have been 10's of thousands that have pass thru the B.T. And there has been thousands of people that have not been able to get thru the B.T.... And the first to discover the B.T. Has to be the Chinese for they have the earliest writting about that specific area............................ Also it is being said in some circles that the Chinese discovered America well before the Vikings did... Is it correct well we may never know if that is facts or not...............

2007-08-08 16:25:52 · answer #4 · answered by kilroymaster 7 · 0 1

sure. And maximum of those disappearances have been brought about from organic issues, no longer something supernatural. nearly all of people crossing the Bermuda did no longer finally end up disappearing so i think of you would be ok lol.

2016-12-15 09:03:55 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My question is, why do people want to believe in hokus pokus? There's Bigfoot, the New Jersey Devil, the Loch Ness Monster and many more stories not to mention ghosts and poltergeists. To answer your question I think I read somewhere a long time ago that the man who started the Burlitz Language Schools wrote a book about it. I know that you and many other people don't want to hear it but the truth is, it's all fiction. Sorry

2007-08-08 01:08:33 · answer #6 · answered by Igor Jivatofski 5 · 1 2

lots of people pass through it,it covers a huge area.
if you look at the map link, .that's the area where most of the hurricanes start up the US coast. they didn't have radar hundreds of years ago,so they probably explained it as a cursed area.

2007-08-08 01:08:45 · answer #7 · answered by soulburner 7 · 3 0

I get through it. The broom must be under the radar.

2007-08-08 07:23:47 · answer #8 · answered by Sal D 6 · 0 0

it's said that Christopher Columbus saw some light there or something and had bad weather there

maybe him he seemed to discover lots !!!

2007-08-08 00:55:00 · answer #9 · answered by ♥jazzy♥ 3 · 1 1

I would think the first person to discover it would be the first victim. It is very true that no body can pass thru.

2007-08-08 00:53:42 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 5

fedest.com, questions and answers