The same as I was doing before. The BT is a made-up mystery, you are no more likely to vanish there than anywhere else.
i dont know but im doing a report on this and i would like to know too :)
a Scientist do is to
Nobody knows for sure. as you know many strange things have happened here. i do studies on the Bermuda triangle. I am not like David kushe, and say there is no possible theory in solving the Bermuda triangle. I believe the is a logical explanation, only we aren't at the time to understand its explanation. i think that there is mars rock in the Bermuda Triangle. I was doing research, and came across alot of little puzzle peices. I was on youtube and found a video of a guy looking at mars and something about ancient life form or whatever. but that was not what caught my eye. what caught my eye was the SHAPE of the rocks together. they obviously formed well, a triangle. it's quite hard to understand if you don't know exactly what I'm talking about. I did my best, i hope this helped. I'm only twelve, by the way. :D
The area known as the Bermuda Triangle is an area that has the fast Gulf Stream current and at times it has areas that are calm with no breezes. This can cause boats to be carried off course or sail boats to be stranded. It also seems to have some magnetic anomaly that does effect the compasses of boats and aircraft. This could explain why aircraft get off course and get lost.
The Bermuda Triangle (a.k.a. the Devil's Triangle) is a triangular area in the Atlantic Ocean bounded roughly at its points by Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico. Legend has it that many people, ships and planes have mysteriously vanished in this area. How many have mysteriously disappeared depends on who is doing the locating and the counting. The size of the triangle varies from 500,000 square miles to three times that size, depending on the imagination of the author. (Some include the Azores, the Gulf of Mexico, and the West Indies in the "triangle.") Some trace the mystery back to the time of Columbus. Even so, estimates range from about 200 to no more than 1,000 incidents in the past 500 years. Howard Rosenberg claims that in 1973 the U.S. Coast Guard answered more than 8,000 distress calls in the area and that more than 50 ships and 20 planes have gone down in the Bermuda Triangle within the last century.Some facts from the World Factbook:The population of Bermuda is approx. 68,265; the population of Peurto Rico is approx. 3,978,702; the population of the Bahamas is approx. 310,426. That's a total of approx. 4,115,000permanent residents in the Bermuda Triangle. There are also several hundred thousand visitors that regularly travel to and from these countries every year.
The most recent disappearance was the boat of Mariana Bay 7 disappeared 3 days ago, which was 0ctober 21, 2007.
The former- and well-known Fishing commentator of Radio and TV fame- Vincent ( Gadabout) Gaddis, wrote a book about the mystery- called Invisible Horizons, and this popularized the term Bermuda Triangle. It is not known if the Flying Fisherman-as he was known, ever scouted out the area in his Amphibious plane- a Republic Seabee.
following the scientist method. it is the same no matter who is doing it.
An isosceles triangle can exist but it is not capable of doing anything.
so that the scientist will be easy to do his/her experiments=)
doing geogogy