BERMUDA TRIANGLE
Bermuda Triangle
The Bermuda Triangle (also known as the Bermuda
Triangle; also known as the Devil's Triangle), located in the Sargasso Sea
of the North Atlantic, is a triangular
sea formed by the British Bermuda Islands, the US Puerto Rico and the southern
tip of Florida, With an area of about
1.16 million square kilometers (450,000 square miles), the Bahamas, an economy
that relies on tourism, most of its territory is located in or near this sea
area.
The waters near the area where the Bermuda Triangle
is located are one of the busiest in the world, and ships often cross this area
to reach ports in the Americas, Europe and the Caribbean. The Bermuda Triangle
is not a particularly dangerous or unusual sea area. The mysteries related to
the Bermuda Triangle are mostly long-term misunderstandings,
misrepresentations, and exaggerations of the missing incidents. They are the
products of various rumours and speculations. According to the statistics of
"Global Ocean Crash", there are fewer missing ships and aircraft in
the Bermuda Triangle than in other busy areas. The insurance industry also
confirmed that the Bermuda Triangle is not a dangerous sea area; however, due
to various rumors and Hype, the missing incident in the Bermuda Triangle, and
the mysterious atmosphere that emerged due to rumors have become a part of
popular culture, and the legends of the Bermuda Triangle are often adapted and
quoted by various film and television works.
First Narrative
EVW Jones first mentioned the disappearance of the
Bermuda Triangle in 1950. As the Lace News of the Associated Press cable
service, it was about the recent disappearance of ships. The Jones report
recorded the ships, aircraft and various military in the area. The mysterious
disappearance of the transportation vehicle and attributed the incident to the
"Devil's Triangle". Subsequently, the author George X. Sand also
reported the incident in 1952, summarizing several incredible fleet
disappearances, published in Destiny magazine. , But the term "Bermuda
Triangle" was not used for the first time in an article by Vincent Gaddis
until 1964 and was published in the magazine "Big Merchant Marine".
Highly
Questioned
Critics accused Berlitz, the author of the 1974
best-selling book "Bermuda Triangle", for exaggerating certain
mysterious disappearances (Belitz did not provide any explanation for
supernatural phenomena at the time) and argued that In other seas, the Bermuda
Triangle did not report any more incidents of disappearance. Subsequently, Lloyd’s
of London also stated that the Bermuda Triangle is no longer the most dangerous
sea area, and ships passing through this area have never raised any more
Insurance claims, and the US Coast Guard confirmed this claim. There are fewer
and fewer questions.
Us Navy Fleet 19
Among the Bermuda Triangle incidents, the US Navy
Fleet 19 incident is the most famous. On December 5, 1945, a 14-person training
flight squadron consisting of five U.S. Navy TBM Avenger bombers left Fort
Lauderdale, Florida. According to Berlitz's book, the leader's plane is a naval
flight expert, which is not entirely correct. In addition, Berlitz said that
the design of the Avengers bomber was sufficient to float on the water for a
long time. It was reported that the weather was clear and the sea was calm the
next day. However, not only did these planes not be found, but even the navy
PBM-5 Mariner seaplane that went on search and rescue was missing. The Navy's
investigation report said that the accident was caused by "unknown reasons",
making the incident more intriguing.
A 500-page naval investigation report a few months
later stated:
Taylor mistakenly saw several small islands he saw
as Florida Keys, so he mistakenly thought he was flying north over the Gulf of
Mexico.
Although Taylor is an experienced pilot officer, he
is prone to errors when flying at sea. He has abandoned his aircraft on the
Pacific Ocean twice and was rescued.
The crash of PBM-5 BuNo 59225 was due to an
explosion.
The Navy report began to say that this was due to
Taylor’s mistake, but his mother protested that there was no evidence and
changed to “unexplained”. Unexplained reasons inspired people's rich
imagination.
Later in the Bermuda Mystery Delta program produced
by the BBC, it was confirmed that the fleet was deviated from the course due to
the influence of the wind direction during the voyage. Afterwards, the pilot
thought that he flew to the Gulf of Mexico 220 miles away from the original
position (in fact, the nearby islands are similar in shape), which made the
pilots think that their compass was wrong, and the extremely bad weather made
the pilot suffer from "space". "Lost" (a condition of
disorientation during flight), under extreme tension and anxiety, even if the
control tower provides the correct instructions, the pilot still insists on
driving back from the "Gulf of Mexico" to the interior (but actually
is far away and driving Out of the Atlantic). In the end, it took 25 minutes
more to return to the interior, but the pilot's decision led the team to make a
three-way turn to make an emergency landing in the open sea during the wind and
rain, causing the so-called disappearance. The reason why the whole event is
described as a mysterious event in the show is: the illusion of compass error
due to strong winds before the flight, similar terrain, and the illusion of
"space lost" caused by long-term pilots in harsh environments Make
wrong decisions, etc.
On the way to Bermuda, Captain McMillan contacted
the next gas station, Kindley Field, as usual and asked for directions to
adjust the navigation system to ensure that the aircraft remained in flight. At
that time, because it was learned that the aircraft deviated slightly from the
course, the aircraft was corrected according to the first-degree direction of
72 degrees that Bermuda reached from Kindley Field.
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