It might, just MIGHT be an alternate dimension, this would explain the loss of any physical effects- human bodies, parts of ships and planes, wreckage , etc. There might be another dimension.
You start with a ship or plane and you fly to the Bermuda Triangle and the weather turns BAD!
hmmmmmmmm......... NOBODY LIKES SOGGY CHICKENWINGS!!!!
It makes a great story, but there is little truth in the stories. The area called the Bermuda triangle is not even well defined.
There is no proof that aliens even exist. They are just a story people make up to sell newspapers and such. the Bermuda Triangle is a made-up mystery, too. Given the amount of traffic, the weather and such, the amount of missing vehicles is about what you would expect. Again, an story made up to sell books and such. There is a book by a man named Larry Kusche (or something like that) called "The Bermuda Triangle Mystery-Solved". Anyone interested in knowing the true facts about the Triangle should read it.
Everyday since it is in a shipping route used by boats. The Bermuda Triangle varies its exact location depending of who is telling the story. Whichever version of the 'triangle' you are referring to, hundreds of thousands to millions of people live, work, and lead normal, everyday lives, including travelling from island to island to mainland. Those people come and go throughout the 'triangle' everyday.
Their is no concrete nor visual evidence or proof that the Bermuda triangle exsists.It is not believed that it is true... In addition:The US Board of Geographic Names does not recognize the Bermuda Triangle as an official name.The US Navy does not believe the Bermuda Triangle exists.It is reported that Lloyd's of London, the world's leading market for specialist insurance, does not charge higher premiums for vessels transiting this heavily traveled area.
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.
Nobody knows for sure....for more stories and experiences u can hit google and utube
No, Marie Celeste was not found in the Bermuda Triangle. The name references the main ship in the short story "J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement" published by Arthur Conan Doyle (May 22, 1859 - July 7, 1930) in Cornhill Magazine in January 1884. The short story presents the ship, based upon the events of 1872 in the sailing career of the hermaphrodite brig Mary Celeste, as sailing from Louisiana to Africa without any stops in the Bermuda Triangle.
The Bermuda Triangle is an area of ocean where many planes, ships, and boats have gone missing without a trace. Often times, crafts will venture in there and are sometimes never again heard from. Bermuda, Miami, Florida, and San Juan, Puerto Rico form the points of the Triangle. The Bermuda Triangle is an area of the Atlantic Ocean - shaped like a triangle - with points in Bermuda, Florida, and Puerto Rico. A lot of planes and watercraft have supposedly disappeared in this area, where supernatural forces are blamed for the disappearance of ships, boats and planes, including Flight 19. People are to scared to see inside it cause its to mysterious that they might get lost in it. It is an area where many inexperience sailors and pilots have been lost. It has been hyped by the sensationalising press because it sells publications to gullible people who are willing to believe any outrageous story that is yet to be fully explained.
Evidentally, there are probably more unsolved aircraft incidents in the Triangle than Ships, as planes are smaller, harder to locate and move fast, the last can be a liability in a danger zone on the down angle.
The Bermuda triangle isn't a curse, it's a tale or a legend. Some people wrote about this tale and it sold a lot of books and magazines so well that the story lives on. There's no science behind it but there's always a whole new generation who hasn't read about it so there's a whole new market to sell books and magazines about it.