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No. -_-
That's the easy part to explain, 'mysterious' disappearances sell books. The Bermuda triangle has everything to do with the marketplace and nothing to do with science.
For its mysterious disappearances of planes and ships.
The disappearances of people that entered the triangle.
They are one of many theories yes.
about 2000 vesseld 75 planes
The Bermuda Triangle was formed by someone with a map, a ruler, a pencil, and an overactive imagination. Someone realised at a certain moment that the area where many disappearances were reported resembled a "triangle" on the map.
Lots they aren't quiet sure yet but over 100 in 3 months in 2008 so yea a lot to find more you should search the Bermuda Triangle on google its a great source
The so called disappearances and problems in the Bermuda Triangle are simply a fraud. There is no proof that anything strange happens there any more frequently than anywhere else.
Because more disappearances has happened in the last 20 years
Almost all of them. The "Star Tiger" disappeared on a flight to Bermuda in January, 1948, and a Douglas DC-3 disappeared in December that same year. A training flight of bombers went missing in 1945, possibly in the area of the triangle. There are dozens of flights over the "Bermuda Triangle" every day, and in the past 80 years these are about the only unexplained disappearances--all of which occurred more than 60 years ago. Oh, a Cessna disappeared in 1969. Statistical analysis has shown that any equally heavily traveled area of ocean has about the same (or more) "unexplained" disappearances as the Bermuda Triangle. Disappearances there are not statistically significant.