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usman_latif_ch 23-05-2009 08:57 PM

Bermuda Triangle --- Math or Reality
 
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Bermuda Triangle
Math or Reality
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Bermuda Triangle, region of the western Atlantic Ocean that has
become associated in the popular imagination with mysterious maritime
disasters. Also known as the Devil's Triangle, the triangle-shaped
area covers about 1,140,000 sq km (about 440,000 sq mi) between the
island of Bermuda, the coast of southern Florida, and Puerto Rico..

The sinister reputation of the Bermuda Triangle may be traceable to
reports made in the late 15th century by navigator Christopher
Columbus concerning the Sargasso Sea, in which floating masses of
gulfweed were regarded as uncanny and perilous by early sailors;
others date the notoriety of the area to the mid-19th century, when a
number of reports were made of unexplained disappearances and
mysteriously abandoned ships. The earliest recorded disappearance of
a United States vessel in the area occurred in March 1918, when the
USS Cyclops vanished.

The incident that consolidated the reputation of the Bermuda Triangle
was the disappearance in December 1945 of Flight 19, a training
squadron of five U.S. Navy torpedo bombers. The squadron left Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, with 14 crewmen and disappeared after radioing a
series of distress messages; a seaplane sent in search of the
squadron also disappeared. Aircraft that have disappeared in the area
since this incident include a DC-3 carrying 27 passengers in 1948 and
a C-124 Globemaster with 53 passengers in 1951. Among the ships that
have disappeared was the tankership Marine Sulphur Queen, which
vanished with 39 men aboard in 1963.

Books, articles, and television broadcasts investigating the Bermuda
Triangle emphasize that, in the case of most of the disappearances,
the weather was favorable, the disappearances occurred in daylight
after a sudden break in radio contact, and the vessels vanished
without a trace. However, skeptics point out that many supposed
mysteries result from careless or biased consideration of data. For
example, some losses attributed to the Bermuda Triangle actually
occurred outside the area of the triangle in inclement weather
conditions or in darkness, and some can be traced to known mechanical
problems or inadequate equipment. In the case of Flight 19, for
example, the squadron commander was relatively inexperienced, a
compass was faulty, the squadron failed to follow instructions, and
the aircraft were operating under conditions of deteriorating weather
and visibility and with a low fuel supply. Other proposed
explanations for disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle include the
action of physical forces unknown to science, a "hole in the sky," an
unusual chemical component in the region's seawater, and abduction by
extraterrestrial beings.

Scientific evaluations of the Bermuda Triangle have concluded that
the number of disappearances in the region is not abnormal and that
most of the disappearances have logical explanations. Paranormal
associations with the Bermuda Triangle persist in the public mind,
however.




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