Probably never. The Bermuda triangle isn't what true scientist would write about. Keep looking for one!
There are, however, many by conspiracy theorists and the like which do not investigate merely speculate and are not rigorous in arriving at their conclusions.
a boat
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.
The term was first popularized by of all people, the Fishing columnist ( and once very popular on TV and radio) Vincent (Gadabout) Gaddis. He wrote a book called evasive horizons or a similar- maybe invisible Horizons- about the Bermuda Triangle, numerous lost ships and aircraft in the area and so on. Mr. Gaddis in a sense popularized the Bermuda Triangle. He is better known for his radio and tv fishing programs.
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!
a meteor hit the Bermuda triangle and some meteors are magnetic no a lot of meteors are magnetic and there you go ~ The "Bermuda Triangle" is a hocus-pocus scam moneymaker for people who write stupid books about the Bermuda Triangle. There's nothing sinister there. Ships disappear all the time, all over the globe. But there is no "Aleutian Islands Triangle", so Fox News doesn't cover it when a poor fishing boat or something capsizes up there. The only reason they seem to be a big thing in the 'Bermuda Triangle' is that that area of the Atlantic has a TON of shipping routes through it, so at any given time, there are more ships there than there are, say, off the coast of Greenland. Wacko author Charles Berlitz wrote a book about it back in the 1970s, made a million dollars, and now everyone thinks that there's some spooky stuff going on. No one ever asks about the thousands of airline flights, and hundreds of ship crossings, that occur there every day, with no funny stuff going on.
Most scientists do!
Vampires, witchcraft, ancient rituals, dreams, fortune telling, supernova, astronomy, religions, the paranormal, lost civilizations of the world, near-death experiences, aliens, the Bermuda Triangle, etc.
No
Write a function that print a triangle of stars.
write a c++ programe to print a triangle without (for)
He drew a triangle on his geometry test.
Polyphemus the Cyclopes lives on an island in the Bermuda Triangle (The Sea of Monsters).Answer 2:The Greeks were not aware of a Bermuda Triangle or even the existence of that part of the world. And 'The Sea of Monsters' is definitely NOT Greek Mythology.I have something to add too:In the Homer version of Odysseus, the island that the Cyclops lived on did not have a name, at least in Greek mythology it didn'tand i personally think that Odysseus is pretty boring to learn about so is anyone willing to write me an essay about how Odysseus is not a hero?i would rlly appreciate itthxhav fun