The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, is an undefined region in the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean where a number of aircraft and ships are said to have disappeared under mysterious circumstances. Popular culture has attributed these disappearances to paranormal or extraterrestrial activity, but documented evidence indicates that many incidents were inaccurately reported or embellished. While some point to theories like methane bubbles or killer waves, skeptics argue that disappearances can be explained by phenomena like human error, equipment failure, hurricanes, or simply inaccurate reports that cannot be proven or disproven.
2. What actually Bermuda Triangle
• The Bermuda Triangle, also
known as the Devil's Triangle, is
an undefined region in the
western part of the
North Atlantic Ocean, where a
number of aircraft and ships are
said to have disappeared under
mysterious circumstances.
According to the US Navy, the
triangle does not exist, and the
name is not recognized by
the US Board on Geographic
Names.[1] Popular culture has
attributed various
disappearances to
the paranormalor activity
by extraterrestrial
beings. Documented evidence
indicates that a significant
percentage of the incidents
were spurious, inaccurately
reported, or embellished by
later authors.[3][4][5] In a 2013
study, the World Wide Fund for
Nature identified the world’s 10
most dangerous waters for
shipping, but the Bermuda
Triangle was not among
them.[6] Contrary to popular
belief, insurance companies do
not charge higher premiums for
shipping in this area
3. Where is it?
The Bermuda
Triangle also
known as
Devil’s
Triangle, is a
region in
Atlantic Ocean
4. What Happens?
• Airplane and Ships disappear
• Tropical storm happen
• Compass needle deflects
• Large sea waves
5. Flight 19
Historic Incident
Flight 19 was the designation
of five TBM Avenger torpedo
bombers that disappeared ov
er the Bermuda Triangle on
December 5, 1945 during
aUnited States
Navy overwater navigation
training flight from Naval Air
Station Fort
Lauderdale, Florida. All 14
airmen on the flight were lost,
as were all 13 crew members
of a PBM Mariner flying
boat assumed by professional
investigators to have exploded
in mid-air while searching for
the flight. Flight 19's scheduled navigation
exercise on December 5, 1945.
Artist's depiction of the
five TBM Avengers that
disappeared.
6. Theories
1. Some people say that when Atlantis sank, it left
a rock, the Bimini Road, which influences this
territory.
2. UFOs( u n i d e n t i f y i n g f l y i n g o b j e c t s )
3. Time holes
4. Space cracks)
5. Methane bubbles which come from the bottom
of the ocean.
6. Killer waves which are 20-30 meters high
7. Electronic fog with paranormal time storms
7. Real facts
1. The Gulf Stream, a deep ocean current, flows at the speed
of 2,5 meter per SECOND. It carries away ships and
influences compass magnetic directions.
2. Piracy in the Caribbean (when a group of pirates attack a
ship and take it illegally).
3. Hurricanes are strong storms which kill many people on
water.
4. Methane hydrate is a gas which kills people and ships sink
very quickly.
5. Killer waves turn over oil platforms make ships sink.
6. Human mistakes kill people because they think that if
they have a big ship they can go through any wave and
storm.
8. S ke pt i c i sm
David Kusche said about the
problem with the Bermuda
Triangle stories :
“If I say that a parrot was
kidnapped to teach aliens
human language and I ask
you to prove that is not true.
You can’t. There is simply no
way to prove that it is wrong.
Only the person who says it
can prove that it is wrong or
true."