No disappearances have been found. If losses have been found, they're not called disappearances.
8,152 people disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle?
there are 9999
It is claimed that more than 1,000 people have disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle, this has not been proven. Though myth and scare mongering has to be taken into account making it about 750 people who have actually become lost in the Bermuda triangle
Since the Bermuda triangle is a theoretical place, rather than a physical place, it exists as long as people believe that it does.
People has been recorded going missing inside this area since 1492.
It has been recorded since 1492.
The first use of the term was in a 1964 article that was published in 'Argosy' by Vincent Gaddis called 'The Deadly Bermuda Triangle'. Then in 1974, two books were published, 'The Bermuda Triangle' by Charles Berlits and 'The Devil's Triangle' by Richard Winer. These books turned out to be very popular and the idea caught on, making this an excellent subject to sell books and magazines. These two books were the source for the popular terms. Since that time, many stories and urban legends have been told about this area; there seems to be no end to the fanciful spin that people enjoy with these stories. But the fact is, the Bermuda Triangle area is one of the most popular and heavily travelled areas of the western world. Every cruise ship that sails out of Miami sails into the Triangle. Everyone who lives in and travels by plane or ship between Bermuda, Miami, Peurto Rico and the Bahamas travels through the Bermuda Triangle. So, it's safe to say that the Bermuda Triangle is a myth; but you are free to enjoy the stories if it suits you.
Since the Bermuda Triangle is a part of Earth (so we know of), so it must have appeared at the time the Earth was born. No one knows why the Bermuda Triangle somehow make planes,ships,submarines,and many other stuff mysteriously '' disappear'' when they enter it.
ou won't find it on any official map and you won't know when you cross the line, but according to some people, the Bermuda Triangle is a very real place where dozen of ships, planes and people have disappeared with no good explanation. Since a magazine first coined the phrase "Bermuda Triangle" in 1964, the mystery has continued to attract attention. When you dig deeper into most cases, though, they're much less mysterious. Either they were never in the area to begin with, they were actually found, or there's a reasonable explanation for their disappearance. Does this mean there's nothing to the claims of so many who have had odd experiences in the Bermuda Triangle? Not necessarily. Scientists have documented deviations from the norm in the area and have found some interesting formations on the seafloor within the Bermuda Triangle's boundaries. So, for those who like to believe in it, there is plenty fuel for the fire. In this article, we'll look at the facts surrounding what we do know about the area as well as some of the most commonly-recited stories. We'll also explore the bizarre theories like aliens and space portals as well as the mundane explanations. Many think of the Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, as an "imaginary" area. The U. S. Board of Geographic Names does not recognize the Bermuda Triangle and does not maintain an official file on it. However, within this imaginary area, many real vessels and the people aboard them have seemingly disappeared without explanation. The Bermuda Triangle is located off the Southeastern coast of the United States in the Atlantic Ocean, with its apexes in the vicinities of Bermuda, Miami, Florida, and San Juan, Puerto Rico. It covers roughly 500,000 square miles. The area may have been named after its Bermuda apex since Bermuda was once known as the "Isle of Devils." Treacherous reefs that have ensnared ships sailing too close to its shores surround Bermuda, and there are hundreds of shipwrecks in the waters that surround it.
As to when it was discovered that is difficult to know, but it has been recorded since 1492
It is a plotted area outside of Bermuda whose boundaries form the shape of a triangle. Therefore, in a way, it is truly a triangle. It also isn't really a triangle though, since it has invisible boundaries.
That should be pretty easy since the Bermuda triangle is only lines drawn on a map. To make it three dimensional, you could mount the map on cardboard, use pushpins for the three corners (Bermuda, Miami, and Puerto Rico or whichever version you prefer), and connect a string from one pin to the next to complete the triangle. That's it.
The Bermuda Triangle covers just over 932,000 square miles of open seas in the Atlantic Ocean and has its three points falling near Florida's Atlantic coast, Puerto Rico, and the mid-Atlantic island of Bermuda.With new cases being reported every year, the triangle basically has grown spikes on all three sides resulting in the Bermuda triangle no longer being a triangle.At one apex, Florida's Atlantic coast, there have been reports of small aircraft disappearances over land. The Bermuda Triangle is not located on any continent.See the related links below for more information and a map of the area.
Well, let's see... Alcatraz has not been a prison since the early Sixties, people come and go all the time. The Bermuda Triangle is a manufactured mystery; you are no more likely to vanish there than anywhere else, or you can bet Lloyd's of London would forbid traffic in it. So neither place is particularly inescapable.