Bermuda

Bermuda Triangle: The Black Hole On Earth.

  • 1492

    The Devil's Triangle

    The Devil's Triangle
    As we all know that A Black Hole is a region in space, where things seems to disappear and never found again. Similarly The Bermuda Triangle is a mythical section of the Atlantic Ocean roughly bounded by Miami, Bermuda and Puerto Rico where dozens of ships and airplanes have disappeared. It's like a black hole on Earth. It is also known as the Devil's Triangle. There are many myths and stories of supernatural existences and sea monsters.
  • Period: 1492 to

    Period

    Throughout these years many unrecoverable and unknown incidents had occur in Bermuda triangle. The most relevant reason or explanation The Scientists have provided is all these incidents occurred due to extreme severe weather conditions.
  • Oct 8, 1492

    Columbus's first Voyage

    Columbus's first Voyage
    The Bermuda Triangle’s bad reputation started with Christopher Columbus. He on his first voyage to the New World, sailed the ocean blue into the Bermuda Triangle, on October 8, 1492, he reportedly saw 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. Columbus looked down at his compass and noticed that it was giving weird readings.
  • A GHOST SHIP

    A GHOST SHIP
    The Ellen Austin, a ship sailing from Liverpool to New York, encountered a "ghost ship" in the Bermuda Triangle. When the Ellen Austin approached the foggy waters the crew encountered an abandoned ship. Then a thick and blinding fog rolled in and separated the ships. When the fog finally cleared, the "ghost" ship had completely vanished
  • Joshua Slocum

    Joshua Slocum
    Joshua Slocum was the first man to sail solo around the world, he vanished on a voyage from Martha's Vineyard to South America. He should have never been lost at sea as he was known as a fantastic and a first sailor and his unexpected disappearance has since been attributed to Bermuda Triangle.
  • The USS Cyclops

    The USS Cyclops
    In 1918, the US Navy's largest and fastest fuel ship, the USS Cyclops, disappeared on route from the Caribbean to Baltimore with 309 crew members and didn't leave a single trace of what had happened.
  • The USS Proteus & USS Nereus

    The USS Proteus & USS Nereus
    A Navy ship called the USS Proteus was carrying 58 passengers and a cargo of ore from St. Thomas to the East Coast when it suddenly vanished in the Bermuda Triangle. One month later, it's sister ship, The USS Nereus, disappeared with 61 people along the same route.
  • Flight-19

    Flight-19
    A group of five TBM Avenger torpedo bombers took off from a naval base in Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. and vanished in the Atlantic Ocean before completing their mission. Along the way, the flight's leader Lieutenant Charles C. Taylor became paranoid when his compass failed and he believed that the planes were moving in the wrong direction into the Bermuda Triangle.
  • DC-3 & Star Tiger

    DC-3 & Star Tiger
    In 1948, a DC-3 commercial flight vanished over the Triangle with 29 passengers and two crew members headed toward Miami. That same year, a British Avro Tudor plane dubbed "Star Tiger" vanished in the Bermuda Triangle without a trace. Twenty-five passengers and six crew members were on board, and no wreckage or information was ever found.
  • Star Ariel

    Star Ariel
    A G-AGRE plane dubbed "Star Ariel" departed from Bermuda to Kingston, Jamaica. But the flight suddenly lost communications when it switched over to Kingston frequency above the Bermuda triangle. Though the weather was clear and the flight appeared to be on track, it was never seen or heard from again.
  • The SS Marine Sulphur Queen

    The SS Marine Sulphur Queen
    The SS Marine Sulphur Queen, a large tanker ship carrying 39 passengers and molten sulfur, was last seen near the southern coast of Florida. After more than two weeks of looking, the rescue team only found a few pieces of debris and life preservers.
  • Vincent Gaddis

    Vincent Gaddis
    The phrase "Bermuda triangle" was officially coined by Vincent Gaddis in a 1964 pulp magazine article titled "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle."
  • Sylvia L. Ossa

     Sylvia L. Ossa
    The 590-foot cargo ship Sylvia L. Ossa suddenly disappeared with 37 people on board. Though debris including life preserver and a lifeboat was found, the ship itself was never again detected.
  • Irving Rivers

    Irving Rivers
    An experienced pilot named Irving Rivers departed from the US Virgin Islands on a solo flight to pick up passengers in St. Thomas. The weather was calm, when his signal lights suddenly disappeared from the radar. A search team was sent to look for him, but the plane was never found.
  • A Cessna plane

    A Cessna plane
    A Cessna plane departing from Fort Lauderdale, and in route to an island in the Bahamas, completely vanished from radar signals before dropping down into the ocean. There were no radio signals issued, and though one woman claimed to have seen the plane fall into the water, no wreckage was ever found.