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Wat do u think is d theory behind bermuda triangle concept?

by Guest32500  |  earlier

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Wat do u think is d theory behind bermuda triangle concept?

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10 ANSWERS


  1. Magnetic Fields


  2. my chemistry teacher had a reasonable explanation for the disappearance of boats

    The under water volcanoes produce bubbles, and as there is less pressure near the surface of the water, the bubbles expand.

    These huge bubbles produce foam, which is less dense than water, causing the boats to sink.

    As for the planes, i reckon its the ufo's

    XD

  3. yes magnetic with time travel idk i watched this 2 hour special on discovery channel with this guy that acctually did fly through it and out alive but there was no possible way his plane could have got from point a to point b even going the fastest speed on the plane in the short amount of time he did. im curious as well

  4. there is a huge current of electromagnetic fields in that position which people usually proclaim of existance of a pathway to the outer world............well coming to reality because of the presence of electromagnetic fields in huge quantities the navigator in the plane or a ship starts spinning rapidly so, it is not able to come up with the correct diection

    due to this planes or ships get lost,they sink or crash and settle into the sea bed.............people also claim that the ancient atlantic city mostly known for its riches and huge sized animals,was situated there,so some magical stuff makes the planes or ships to go missing.

  5. The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, is a region of the northwestern Atlantic Ocean in which a number of aircraft and surface vessels have disappeared. Some people have claimed that these disappearances fall beyond the boundaries of human error or acts of nature. Popular culture has attributed some of these disappearances to the paranormal, a suspension of the laws of physics, or activity by extraterrestrial beings.[1] Though a substantial documentation exists showing numerous incidents to have been inaccurately reported or embellished by later authors, and numerous official agencies have gone on record as stating the number and nature of disappearances to be similar to any other area of ocean, many have remained unexplained despite considerable investigation.

  6. Earths Magnetic field does not work correctly there.

  7. 5. Methane burps  Sudden release of large volumes of methane from marine sediments are increasingly being blamed for previously unexplained catastrophic events in Earth's history. Effects on the carbon cycle. Evidence in the rock record. The Bermuda Triangle?

    http://www.tcd.ie/Geology/MAIN-PAGE/ssop...

    In 1973, three Russians -- historians Nikolai Goncharov, construction engineer Vyacheslav Morozov and electronics specialist Valery Makarov -- announced in the science journal for the Soviet Academy of Science, Chemistry and Life, their discovery of a geometric grid pattern which appears to interlink a wide number of natural phenomena into a single planetary system. Their work was based on the findings of American researcher   Ivan T. Sanderson who identified what he called twelve vile vortexes or electromagnetic energy disturbances located equidistant over the surface of the globe, the so-called Bermuda Triangle near the Caribbean and the Devil's Sea off Japan being two of these.

    http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/mapas_...

  8. Here's an interesting theory....check this  out, I love this book!

  9. There is the theory of high magnetism in the area.  The high concentration of methane causes engine failure in aircraft.

  10. People's overactive imaginations!!!

    People have been sailing ships in the western Atlantic since 1492.  They've been flying airplanes there since World War I.  And all that time, nobody really knew if or when or where hurricanes were until it was too late.  It wasn't until weather satellites came along about 1970s that we could see hurricanes out in the ocean.

    So, for over 400 years, ships and airplanes would disappear because of unforeseen bad weather.  This type of weather is not usually seen near Europe, so they thought the area southwest of Bermuda was somehow unlucky.

    However, a few years ago, Lloyds of London (who has been insuring ships since like the year 1200 or something), ran a statistical test.  They looked at claims for lost ships and aircraft, and using several places on Earth that were the same size and shape as the Bermuda Triangle looked for patterns.  They created "The Irish Triangle" and the "New Zealand Triangle" and so on...  They found that there was no statistical difference between any areas and the Bermuda Triangle in terms of differences in ships that went missing without a trace.

    So, the Bermuda Triangle exists only in our minds.

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