The document discusses the Bermuda Triangle and attempts to separate fact from fiction regarding disappearances in the area. It notes that while some incidents like Flight 19 seem mysterious, they can often be rationally explained. The author argues that the Bermuda Triangle mystery was largely created and spread through uncritical speculation in media rather than evidence. Overall, statistics show there are no more incidents there than in other busy shipping lanes, and the facts do not support claims of mysterious forces at work in the Triangle.
2. What *is* the Bermuda Triangle?
The vast three-sided
segment of the Atlantic
Ocean bordered by
Bermuda, Puerto Rico
and Fort Lauderdale,
Florida.
Spans an area of around
500,000 square miles, but
some estimates are up to
three times larger.
3. What *is* the Bermuda Triangle?
Reports of strange
occurrences have been
recorded as early as the
days of Columbus.
Sometimes the Coast
Guard answers more
than 5,000 distress calls
within the Triangle per
year.
Also Known As:
The Devils Triangle
4. What *is* the Bermuda Triangle?
First dubbed The Bermuda
Triangle by writer V.
Gaddis in a 1964 issue of
Argosy, a magazine
devoted to fiction.
Public interest in the
Bermuda Triangle increased
exponentially with the
publication of Charles
Berlitzs 1974 bestseller The
Bermuda Triangle.
5. Who the heck started this?!
1492 Columbuss compass went haywire
and its reported that he and his crew saw
weird lights in the sky.
1892 The Mary Celeste is discovered
abandoned on the high seas about 400
miles off its intended course from New
York to Genoa. There was no sign of its
crew of ten or what happened to them.
6. Why do we still believe this?
In a study of related material, Larry Kushe found that few
people do any investigation into the mystery whatsoever.
They simply passed on the speculations of their
predecessors as if they were passing on the mantle of
truth. (AKA Word of Mouth & Tell A Friend)
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.
7. Who the heck started this?!
-The *REAL* Humdinger December 5, 1945 Flight 19
Five Navy planes vanished without a trace on a
training mission during a severe storm. A rescue
plane was dispatched to find them and it too
never returned. (27 men in all)
An official Navy report of the incident insinuated
that the planes disappeared... as if they had
flown to Mars.
8. Common Ailments of the Triangle
Strange Magnetic Fields
Oceanic Flatulence
Atlantis
Sporadic Interdimensional Travel
Time Warps
Alien Abduction
What have *you* heard?
9. Why do we still believe this?
The current truth is so widely and easily
circulated and believed that the only way to
eliminate it would be for the Navy to make an
announcement to the Nation about it, but as that
costs lots of money, its doubtful theyll do it even
*if* they had the inclination to do so.
Many people have been exposed to the myth of
the Bermuda Triangle before they learn the facts
about the incidents in the Bermuda Triangle,
which arent widely circulated to begin with.
10. The fairest thing to do...
Correlation Investigate past incidents within
the Bermuda Triangle, searching for
authentic/government-issued reports.
Statistics Construct a timeline of incidents that
occurred and compare this distribution with that
of other treacherous areas of the worlds oceans
to see if this areas is significantly higher than
that of other areas.
11. The fairest thing to do...
Conduct a study Select a sizable number of
ships (to be determined by researchers) that will
be passing through the Bermuda Triangle in a
single year (or multiple years) and survey the
Captain and some of the crew about the voyage
across the Triangle.
12. What they *dont* tell you...
Flight 19: Nothing but the facts...
The rescue plane dispatched never returned. Only
because it blew up 23 seconds after takeoff. And this
particular design, the Mariner, was well known for its
faulty gas tanks.
No wreckage was ever found The planes were
possibly so far out in the Atlantic that they passed the
continental shelf; which would mean the planes sank into
several thousand feet of water. (The deepest point in the
Atlantic, at 30,100 feet deep, is also located in the
Puerto Rico Trench *within* the Bermuda Triangle.)
13. The Major holes we overlook...
Most of the associated incidents can be explained by
rational means.
Most of these same incidents blamed on the Bermuda
Triangle didnt occur anywhere *near* the Triangle. (The
Mary Celeste was discovered off the coast of Portugal.)
Some incidents recorded as far away as the Pacific are
blamed on the Bermuda Triangle without reason.
The facts do not support the legend; 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.