bermuda Triangle
Bermuda (or "Devil's") Triangle

The Bermuda Triangle (a.k.a.
the Devil's Triangle) is a triangular area in
the Atlantic Ocean bounded roughly at its points by
Miami, Bermuda, and
Puerto Rico.
Legend has it that many people, ships and planes have
mysteriously vanished in
this area. How many have mysteriously disappeared depends on who is doing
the locating and the counting. The size of the triangle varies from
500,000
square miles
to three times that size, depending on the imagination of the
author. (Some include the Azores, the Gulf of Mexico, and the West Indies in
the "triangle.") Some trace the
mystery back to the time of Columbus. Even so,
estimates range from about 200 to no more than 1,000 incidents in the past 500
years. Howard Rosenberg claims that in 1973 the U.S. Coast Guard answered
more than
8,000 distress calls in the area and that  more than 50 ships and 20
planes
have gone down in the Bermuda Triangle within the last century.

Many theories have been given to explain the extraordinary mystery of these
missing ships and planes. Evil extraterrestrials,
residue crystals from Atlantis,
evil humans with anti-gravity devices or other weird technologies, and vile
vortices from the fourth dimension are favorites among fantasy writers.
Strange
magnetic fields and oceanic flatulence (methane gas from the bottom
of the ocean
) are favorites among the technically-minded. Weather
(
thunderstorms, hurricanes, tsunamis, earthquakes, high waves, currents, etc.)
bad luck, pirates, explosive cargoes, incompetent navigators, and other natural
and human causes are favorites among skeptical investigators.

The modern legend of the Bermuda Triangle began soon after
five Navy planes
[Flight 19] vanished
on a training mission during a severe storm in 1945. The
most logical theory as to why they vanished is that lead pilot Lt. Charles
Taylor’s compass failed. The trainees' planes were not equipped with working
navigational instruments. The group was disoriented and simply, though
tragically, ran out of fuel. No mysterious forces were likely to have been
involved other than the mysterious force of gravity on  planes with no fuel.
It is true that one of the rescue planes blew up shortly after take-off, but
this was likely due to a faulty gas tank rather than to any mysterious forces.

Over the years there have been dozens of articles, books, and television
programs promoting the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle. In his study of this
material, Larry Kusche found that few did any investigation into the mystery.
Rather, they passed on the speculations of their predecessors as if they were
passing on the mantle of truth. Of the many uncritical accounts of the
mystery of the Bermuda Triangle, perhaps no one has done more to create this
myth than Charles Berlitz, who had a bestseller on the subject in 1974. After
examining the 400+ page official report of the Navy Board of Investigation of
the disappearance of the Navy planes in 1945, Kusche found that the Board
wasn't baffled at all by the incident and did not mention alleged radio
transmissions cited by Berlitz in his book. According to Kusche, what isn't
misinterpreted by Berlitz is fabricated. Kusche writes: "If Berlitz were to
report that a boat were red, the chance of it being some other color is almost
a certainty." (Berlitz, by the way, did not invent the name; that was done by
Vincent Gaddis in "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle," which appeared in the
February, 1964, issue of Argosy, a magazine devoted to fiction.)

In short, the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle became a mystery by a kind of
communal reinforcement among uncritical authors and a willing mass media to
uncritically pass on the speculation that something mysterious is going on in
the Atlantic.
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