Its a place where people disapear and dont come back.
2007-09-25 19:23:42
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answer #1
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answered by Pacman 3
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According to the History Channel the best scientific explanation for the losses in the Bermuda Triangle are Rouge Waves. Large waves created at sea by underwater landslides and other effects or by the union of two or more sympathetic waves.
As for the Air Force pilots it sounds like a problem with the magnetic field. Either the magnetic field in the area could have suddenly changed or the planes could have passed through a heavily charged cloud and gotten themselves magnetized. That would make those compasses spin.
Apply Occams's Razor.
According to Wikipedia:
"Occam's razor (sometimes spelled Ockham's razor) is a principle attributed to the 14th-century English logician and Franciscan friar William of Ockham. The principle states that the explanation of any phenomenon should make as few assumptions as possible, eliminating those that make no difference in the observable predictions of the explanatory hypothesis or theory."
Don't go making up complex theories and suggestions when the simple ones can be used.
As to why the boat load of people suddenly disappeared maybe they were called to the deck to see a rogue wave and were knocked overboard by the wave and then the deck dried and when the boat was found no one was on board. Of course I wasn't there and strange, unexplained, things do happen. Quite often they happen without the need for intervention by aliens, former citizens of Alantis or other strange effects.
2007-09-25 19:22:44
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answer #2
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answered by Dan S 7
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It is a myth. It is no more mysterious or dangerous than any other part of the ocean and actually is less mysterious and dangerous because there are shipping lanes and a lot of travel through there and the Gulf Stream. So we are very familiar with the area and people in trouble have a better chance of being rescued.
Ships sink and planes crash in storms there and "disappear" just like they do anywhere there is a storm. Lloyds does not charge hazard insurance rates for the area. Lloyds is in business to make money. Think about it.
2007-09-25 19:35:54
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answer #3
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answered by ♥ ~Sigy the Arctic Kitty~♥ 7
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A lot of the websites tell stories of disappearances that actually didn't happen anywhere near the triangle.
I think that the only thing about the triangle is the odd weather patterns caused by ocean current and athmospheric changes. Sometimes storms and fog can appear from out of no where and planes and ships can get lost easily.
2007-09-26 07:29:40
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answer #4
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answered by xylina_69 4
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What's up with the Bermuda Triangle is that people have overactive imaginations and like to find patterns in chaos and meaning in coincidence.
There's nothing there. That part of the ocean is no more or less dangerous than anywhere else, considering the weather and ocean currents. Shipping insurance isn't any higher there than anywhere else. People just like a good mystery, and if nature doesn't present them with one then they make it up as they go along.
2007-09-26 16:43:22
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I thought it had given up this pastime. I haven't heard anything for several years.
It has a reputation for being the location of lots of disappearances of planes and boats, but there's never been any reasonable explanation for this phenomenon.
Suggestions of magnetic imbalances or vortexes have not been proved.
If you've checked the Web, you know as much as anyone else.
2007-09-25 19:26:09
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answer #6
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answered by felines 5
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It is believed that anything in that area will be disappeared, no proof. I don't believe this.
2007-09-25 19:27:38
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answer #7
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answered by sunlight 3
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have'nt heard much about this lately,once you get your 15 minutes of fame,the story is OVER.
2007-09-26 08:40:52
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answer #8
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answered by CHER 6
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Maybe you should go there and let us all know the truth.
2007-09-25 19:20:11
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answer #9
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answered by slice of jam 3
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I am sorrrry
not my fault
2007-09-25 20:27:23
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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