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Barmoda triangle place is dranger place or safe place?

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  1. Bermuda has a flourishing yacht tourism sector and no mysterious 'Bermuda triangle'.  It's a myth designed to sell poor books to gullible people.


  2. Dranger! Dranger Will Robinson! Dranger!

  3. The Bermuda Triangle is located off the Southeastern coast of the United States in the Atlantic Ocean, with its apexes in the vicinities of Bermuda, Miami, Florida, and San Juan, Puerto Rico. It covers roughly 500,000 square miles.

    The area may have been named after its Bermuda apex since Bermuda was once known as the "Isle of Devils." Treacherous reefs that have ensnared ships sailing too close to its shores surround Bermuda, and there are hundreds of shipwrecks in the waters that surround it

    The U.S.S. Cyclops, 1918

    During World War I, the U.S.S. Cyclops served along the eastern coast of the United States until January 9, 1918. At that time, she was assigned to the Naval Overseas Transportation Service. The Cyclops was scheduled to sail to Brazil to refuel British ships in the south Atlantic. She set out from Rio de Janeiro on February 16, and, after a brief stop in Barbados from March 3 to 4, was never seen or heard from again. All 306 passengers and crew were gone without a trace.

    U.S. Navy Avengers Flight 19, 1945

    The most famous Bermuda Triangle story is the mystery surrounding five missing Navy Avengers in 1945. The story of Flight 19 is usually summarized this way: a routine patrol set out on a sunny day with five highly experienced student pilots. Suddenly, the tower began receiving transmissions from the flight leader that they were lost, compasses were not working, and "everything looked wrong." They were never seen again, and extensive Navy investigations turned up no clues to explain the disappearance.

    Two PBM-5 Mariner seaplanes went out to search the area, but one exploded soon after takeoff. The other never located Flight 19.

    Some proposed explanations have been magnetic abnormalities, methane bubbling up from the sea floor,  sudden storms, and water spouts.

    There are some skeptics who argue that the facts do not support the legend, that there is no mystery to be solved, and nothing that needs explaining.The number of wrecks in this area is not extraordinary, given its size, location and the amount of traffic it receives.

  4. The Bermuda triangle is a place where many ships and aircraft have gone missing. I saw a show on the Discovery Channel (I think) one time that put forth the theory that large pockets and bubbles of methane gas cause many navigation troubles.

    Specifically, the bursting of large bubbles of methane rising from pockets in the sea floor can snap the hulls of ships and splash enormous amounts of water over the top decks. As this gas rises through the atmosphere, its lower density makes planes drop while the navigational instruments indicate lower external air pressure, which makes it seem like the plane is rising uncontrollably when it is really plummeting. I wonder if as many planes would have crashed if the pilots didn't think that they were supposed to try to go down.

    It is dangerous. I do want to go there and try it out, though.

  5. If you meant the Bermuda Triangle, it holds a mystic legend as both ships and planes have been affected by the area, or so the story goes.  You can find out more about the BERMUDA TRIANGLE on the website below.

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