On September 17, 1950, an article was published in the Miami Herald by Edward Van Winkle Jones. In 1952 later Fate Magazine published "Sea Mystery at Our Back Door", a short article by George Sand covering the loss of several planes and ships, including the loss of Flight 19 a group of five US planes on a training mission. Sand's article was the first to lay out the now-familiar triangular area where the losses took place, as well as the first to suggest a supernatural element to the Flight 19 incident.
In short, the basic facts about unnormal things that happened in the region of AO [Atlantic Ocean] has begun in the XX century. And because the authors couldn't write any provide for a reason what happened, the button of the "myth machine" was turned on. Because of the hypothesis about the territory between Florida, two islands of Puerto Rico (despacito what), and Bermuda, which might be the region of anomalies; the triangle was born (I still asking myself why it's a triangle and not a rectangle or a wheel or a square) [Probably 'cuz triangle has three corner which is more strategical to create a nice shape from island to island that is mysterious&spooky than it would have a shape of a square]. Anyway, what created this case more popular is probably born in 1964 when the American magazine Argosy make the article "Lost in the Bermuda Triangle", and because if the more detailed article you created, like Argosy magazine, the more believed it seems to be reliable.
KC-135 Stratotankers, Flight 19, Carroll A. Deering, USS Cyclops, etc. All of these cases, which are sort of way are connected to one place haven't vanished only in Bermuda Triangle. Most of the cases that seem connected to mysterious shape anomalies are connected not to this, but to the whole AO. You see almost every accident that apparently has happened on the Bermuda Triangle, in fact, has happened on the whole service of the water area called Ocean. And this is what is funny, Flight 19 was just a sad pilot mistake that ends with a crash into the water. Most of the US flights have his tragic story because of the exploded engine, technical oversight of the plane, or... both- like the Star Tiger plane. Carroll A. Deering is truly a stranger case, most probably- it could be a very good planned pirate abduction. The oceans are truly masterpieces of massive size land without the deep. On Earth, they are so big, that in a sort of way, the anomaly Triangles could be just more than just one. Maybe there is one mysterious thing that falls for one ocean. The explanation for the Bermuda case? Because oceans are deep and full of terror, there are so many many many remains of the planes, ships, and other types of watercraft and aircraft that they DON'T FKG FLOAT- THEY SINK. Most of the cases of Bermuda Triangle vanishings overlap the territory, like Carroll A. Deering. We, as a people like insisting upon having mysterious conspiracies, and this is what fascinates us- the deep of knowing and unknowing- that's why we love myths, legends, and other unsolved things (this is the reason why I like to solve them, without irrational speculation, only by basic verified information xd).
Vanishing of watercraft and aircraft is very common on the whole surface of the ocean, or even on the sea. If the liquid territory is more huge than a common lake, the probability, the chance of vanishing could be more high risk- and that's why the planes aren't flying through the Pacific Ocean. Amount of traffic, oceanic currents, hurricane tendency- all of this depends on what could go wrong. And territories near the Bahamas have a tendency to be more dangerous by the hurricanes and storms/ gulf streams. Some vanishings happen when the sky is dark or clear, some during day or night, and some over the rainbow (w8 what?). Human fault, explosions, hijacks, abduction, mutiny, etc. Dependence is a kind of illusion because tragedy can happen in any kind of situation if we are we will not catch it sooner, elements that can contribute to the tragedy.
Thanks for reading,
Sigma.
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