Miami is one "corner" of the so-called "Bermuda Triangle". The answer depends on exactly where
in Miami you choose to define that point, and how Miami's departure-control decides to route your
take-off out of Miami.
If the corner point is defined to be on Miami Beach, then the shortest, most direct route out of
Miami Int'l Airport toward London is never closer than 5 or 6 miles from the Triangle.
But if you define the corner of the triangle to be somewhere else in the city, or if they have your
flight take off from runway 9 or 12, and then keep you on take-off heading until you clear the
beach, then you'd be a few miles into the Triangle before you turn northeast and head for London.
No, a flight from London to Dallas will fly north towards Manchester and directly over the Altantic after that, so no, all trans-atlantic flight avoid the Bermuda Triangle. It is so dangerous, it's like a black hole on Earth.
She never went to Bermuda Triangle.
Yes, it did.
Amelia Earhart disappeared during a flight over the PACIFIC OCEAN, That is the other side of the world from the Bermuda Triangle.
The flight distance from Miami, Florida to Bermuda is: 1,037 miles / 1,668 km
No, planes do not have to fly through the Bermuda Triangle. Flight paths are determined by air traffic control and are based on safety, efficiency, and weather conditions. While some routes may pass over this area, many do not, as airlines often choose alternative routes to avoid potential hazards. The Bermuda Triangle is not recognized as a uniquely dangerous area by aviation authorities.
FLIGHT 19
The air France flight was destroyed hundreds of miles away from Bermuda.
It depends if you go through the bermuda triangle or not. Actually, it would be easier to teleport like me, oh wait. Crap...
Amelia went missing in the Pacific Ocean, this is on the other side of the Earth from the Bermuda Triangle! No connection between Electra Project and B.T.
Nobody knows, but they never came back from the Bermuda Triangle, so I'd say they did. It's not surprising because nobody comes out of the Bermuda Triangle alive
No, Air France Flight 447 did not hit the Bermuda Triangle. The flight, which went down on June 1, 2009, was en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris and crashed in the Atlantic Ocean, approximately 1,000 kilometers (about 620 miles) northeast of the Brazilian coast, far from the Bermuda Triangle area. The crash resulted from a combination of factors, including pilot error and technical issues with the aircraft.