i think it was someone called Tyler, he dissappeared when on a training mission on Flight 19.
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Well, not really. Mystery-buffs like to point to the disappearance of Flight 19 as the 'beginning' of the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle, but people had been disappearing in that section of the Atlantic Ocean for hundreds of years. You see, what many people don't realize is that A) that part of the ocean is, and has been, VERY BUSY in terms of shipping and travel, since at least the time of Columbus, and 2) that part of the ocean is subject to tremendous storms and violent weather that can pop up with hardly any notice. So you combine lots of traffic and lots of bad weather, and guess what you get? Lots of sunken ships and stuff. Also, remember that there's good evidence that the planes of Flight 19 might have gone down in the Gulf, way on the other side of Florida, they were so confused and lost.
jack p
titanic
In 1974 Charles Berlitz was the first to talk about the Bermuda Triangle. But I am not sure who was the 1st person
christopher Columbus was the first person to identify and go through the Bermuda triangle
a boat
The answer that the first person gave to this question was foolish. There no way to prevent being sucked in the Bermuda triangle because the pressure is so high that even planes sink.
Vincent H. Gaddis
The concept of the Bermuda Triangle, an area in the North Atlantic Ocean where ships and airplanes are said to mysteriously disappear, gained popularity in the mid-20th century. However, there is no definitive record of a "first person" to successfully navigate through it, as many vessels and aircraft have traversed the area without incident. Notable flights and journeys, such as those by commercial airlines and naval ships, have crossed the region for decades. The idea of the Bermuda Triangle is more a product of folklore and speculation than a historical event involving a singular individual.
The Bermuda is just a lot of nonsense, used to sell worthless books, movies, and television shows. Nova, the PBS science show examined the Bermuda Triangle and found out it was much ado about nothing. So did Dr. Arthur C. Clark on the Discovery Channel. Countless people have gone through the Bermuda Triangle and Nothing happened to them.
The mythical area called the Bermuda Triangle was first mentioned in 1952. It was in an article in Fate magazine by George Sand. He described an area where unusual things happen, but didn't call it the Bermuda Triangle. In 1964 Vincent Gaddis published an article in Argosy Magazine titled "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle" where the notorious name first appeared.
It wasn't made in the first place
Alberto caca