The Mystery of the Bermuda Triangle
Bermuda Triangle is also known as Devil's Triangle. One of life’s great mysteries, the Bermuda Triangle region that lies in the North Atlantic Ocean between Bermuda, Miami and San Juan, Puerto Rico, has been the presumed cause of dozens and dozens of mind-boggling disappearances of ships and planes. Near of triangle it also disable all magnetic energy.
Area of Bermuda Triangle
In 1964, Mr. Vincent Gaddis wrote in the magazine about the boundaries of the Bermuda Triangle. Vertices as Miami, San Juan, Puerto Rico, and Bermuda. Subsequent writers did not necessarily follow this definition.Some writers gave different boundaries and vertices to the triangle, with the total area varying from 1,300,000 to 3,900,000 Sq.km. (500,000 to 1,510,000 sq mi).
How many planes and ships have been lost in the Bermuda Triangle?
The Bermuda Triangle, or Devil's Triangle, has been blamed for the disappearance of dozens of planes and ships in the past 100 years.
When Christopher Columbus sailed through the area on his first voyage to the New World, he reported that a great flame of fire crashed into the sea one night and that a strange light appeared in the distance a few weeks later. William Shakespeare’s play “The Tempest,” which some scholars claim was based on a real-life Bermuda shipwreck, may have enhanced the area’s aura of mystery.
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Torpedo Bomber #28, the lead plane of Flight 19, which mysteriously vanished in the Bermuda Triangle |
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