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!
AnswerThe first use of the term was in a 1964 article that was published in 'Argosy' by Vincent Gaddis called 'The Deadly Bermuda Triangle'.Then in 1974, two books were published, '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 popular terms.AnswerIf it was named The Miami Triangle, you would be asking why it is named The Miami triangle, not Bermuda triangle.
The Bermuda triangle is made up of lines drawn on a map from Miami, FL to Bermuda and Puerto Rico, and includes most of the Bahama Islands. In 1974, two books were published, '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 popular terms. The Bermuda Triangle was devised by authors, not scientists and every decade has a new crop of people who will buy the stories (at least for a while). The 'justification' for the Bermuda Triangle is selling books, movies, and videos.
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.
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.
No, it was an invention to sell books and magazines.
Fantasy and speculation. It sells books.
The first known use of the term "Bermuda Triangle" or "Devil's Triangle" was in a magazine article in a 1964 article that was published in 'Argosy' by Vincent Gaddis called 'The Deadly Bermuda Triangle'. Then in 1974, two books were published, 'The Bermuda Triangle' by Charles Berlits and 'The Devil's Triangle' by Richard Winer. These publications were based on speculation, not science.
The Bermuda triangle was made by people with a map, a ruler, a pencil, and a fertile imagination. The first use of the term was in a 1964 article published in 'Argosy' by Vincent Gaddis called 'The Deadly Bermuda Triangle'.Then in 1974, two books were published, '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 popular terms.
The first use of the term was in a 1964 article with a similar theme that was published in 'Argosy' by Vincent Gaddis called 'The Deadly Bermuda Triangle'. Then in 1974, two books were published, '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 popular terms.
The history of the 'Bermuda Triangle' began with an Associated Press article by Edward Van Winkle Jones in 1950 that there was something unusual about disappearances in the area of Bermuda. The first use of the term was in a 1964 article with a similar theme that was published in 'Argosy' by Vincent Gaddis called 'The Deadly Bermuda Triangle'. Then in 1974, two books were published, '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 popular terms.
Yes, these were both titles of books publish 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.
There are many airports near the so-called Bermuda Triangle.