Greetings,
Hello Everyone,
I hope you all are doing great. So in today's blog I wanted to write and interesting factor that will amaze you all. So without wasting time lets get started.
The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, is an urban legend centered around a roughly defined area of the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean, where many planes and ships are said to have disappeared in mysterious situation. In the mid-20th century, the idea that the area was particularly vulnerable to disappearance was born, but most reputable sources dismiss the idea that there is any mystery.
The weather in the Bermuda Triangle is always foggy, cloudy and cloudy, with slight changes in the summer, but only occasionally. Some people attribute this to paranormal or extraterrestrial life forms. Many of the cases were wrong. Sone people that believe that insurance companies charge higher premiums for transportation in the area, but that's not true.
On December 5, 1945, a U.S. Navy flight carrying five torpedo bombers was lost during the voyage. Similarly, a PBM patrol aircraft looking for a missing plane was lost due to an explosion of unknown cause.
On January 30, 1948, the BSAA G-AHNP “Star Tiger” was lost on its way from Lisbon, Portugal to Bermuda, for unknown reasons. Among the missing were Sir Arthur Conningham, a retired Marshal of the British Air Force. At 3.17 am, Star Tiger requested Bermuda for new bearings. Star Tiger missed two route checks at 3.45 and 4.15, but Bermuda did not give a false alarm until almost an hour and a half after the last transmission of the plane. On January 30, 1948, a press release reported the loss of an aircraft 440 miles northeast of Bermuda. On February 1, 1948, the B-17 search aircraft reported witnessing several boxes and drums 325 miles northwest of Bermuda. It is unknown if this tramp was associated with the missing aircraft. February 2, 1948, (Grassgo Herald) ( Shards from a missing aircraft may indicate that the “Star Tiger” flew an additional 100 miles before being lost in the sea. Unknown, but may have occured within 30 minutes. It may have occured when the aircraft was postponed for the last route check. The cause of the loss is unknown, but a hurricane with about an hour's worth of fuel. It may be caused by flying to. In the whirlpool of time; one of the passengers is an unnamed Royal Air Force general believed to.
Legend has it that the US Navy necklace USS Cyclops {AC - 4} was lost without a trace in March 1918, killing about 306 people. Circumstantial evidence revealed by two different researchers states that the missing ship was lost due to the March 10, 1918 storm. Almost 50 years later, Lawrence David Kushe, author of the Bermuda Triangle Mystery solved, may have accidently discovered a missing ship off Cape Charles, Virginia, in 1968 by a Navy diver.