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.
Your conclusion must come last - it's based on whatever you wrote in your essay about the Bermuda Triangle. We can't give you a conclusion because we didn't write or read your essay.
Yes, the Bermuda Triangle is actually shaped as a tringle. Bermuda is an island but the Triangle is not an island. The Tirangle covers the area down from the coast of Florida all the way down by the Carribean and across, as shaped like a triangle.
The Bermuda Triangle is an imaginary area drawn on a map by the authors of two books published in 1974, '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 use of these terms.Please note that those who promote the 'Bermuda Triangle' theories do not necessarily draw these lines in the same places.
Amelia Earhart has NO connection- dead, alive, missing, whatever- with the Bermuda Triangle. It is true some Aviatrix ( woman pilot) did do some mapping survey of the area in 1935- so says a book put out by the Edgar Cayce organization but it does not state Amelia by name. There were many Aviatrixes out in l935. Amelia has NOTHING TO DO with the Bermuda Triangle. Caroline CASCIO, a modern aviatrix- did go missing in the triangle while operating a Cessna l72 in l969, on or around June 6 ( D-Day) this is a good Thirty- something years AFTER the Electra project.
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.
Mostly because it makes a good story and increases readership of those who write about it. It probably got its biggest boost when 6 Navy fighters presumably went down in that area (although this is not certain; if you don't know where they vanished, you don't know they did it in the triangle). Similar occurrences elsewhere are not "newsy", and therefore have no myths told about them. Occam's razor implies that the simplest answer to a dilemma is most likely the correct answer. A "Bermuda Triangle" is far from the simplest answer!
Specifically on the Bermuda Triangle, the book by that title by Charles Berlitz, also the older and good ( not far-out, author- a fishing commentator- tries to remain objective- Invisible Horizons by Vincent ( Gadabout) Gaddis. it is totally unlike his peppy, revved up radio program, but not at all fishy ( meaning questionable or fraudulent) Bait your hook for Gaddis" book! Hey that rhymes. But the best, most carefully researched book is Larry Kusche's "The Bermuda Triangle Mystery- Solved". It's hard to believe how many right out lies reporters were telling about vanishings that never happened, or didn't happen in the Triangle, that sort of thing. Believe it or not, one of the vanishings was a vessel in the *Pacific* ocean!
It is the good 'ol Dollar!
There is no king of Bermuda. It is self governing - we have a premiere currently Ewart Brown. Bermuda is an overseas territory of the UK so strictly speaking there is a Queen - good old Lizzy!
Good maintenance and good speed despite no one on board are the conditions that the American schooner Ellen Austin found on the half brig Mary Celeste in the Bermuda Triangle. The information comes from the memoirs of Commander Gould, a retired British Navy officer, in 1944. It describes two interactions between a departure date of Friday, Dec. 5, 1880, from London, England, and an arrival date of Friday, Feb. 11, 1881, in New York City, New York.
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.
No. They not good.