Well, actually the water over the Bermuda triangle does disappear. The water forms into a collection of bunches that start off white and fluffy and as the tropical sun heats up the ocean, more and more water evaporates and joins these white fluffy bunches until they begin to turn gray. They get darker and darker and soon can't hold on to the water any longer and it falls piece by piece into the ocean (some does fall on land but eventually runs off the edges into the ocean also). When it falls into the ocean, it seems to disappear but it's not gone, it's in there and when the hot sun starts to work on it, it rises back suspended over the water.
It is a body of water where ships & planes mysteriously disappear.
No. It is the water/ area between 3 islands that make a triangle shape. And supposidly planes and boats that fly through there tend to disappear, and nobody knows why.
The Bermuda triangle has no human population. IT IS WATER!!! Un less you count dead people a population.
methane
sometimes
no states only in water
The Bermuda triangle is in the middle of the ocean, right there between the Caribbean and the Atlantic. It is full of water but that is about it. We can not fill that sea up with anything. And if you are asking about things that disappear there then it has only been like so many dozens of ships and planes; barely enough to fill a giant warehouse.
They were taken away by a water tornado.
it doesnt matter because the water has evaporated
The Bermuda Triangle is a triangular area of water that is located in the Atlantic Ocean. This area covers from the tip of Florida to Bermuda, down to Puerto Rico and back to the tip of Florida.
Miami, Puerto Rico, the Bahama Islands, and Bermuda are usually the land areas that are included in most versions of the Bermuda triangle. The type of land that these places have in common is beautiful beaches and surrounding waters that are very popular with tourists.Actually, the Bermuda Triangle per se is defined over open water: no land.Actually, the Bermuda Triangle is an imaginary place, so what it exactly includes is up to an individual's imagination.
Methanoyl gas bubbles on the floor of the ocean for that area creates sink holes in the water and gases rise to the air affecting the altitude and velocity of the airplanes. Watched this on "Discovery's Dive To The Bermuda Triangle" where 3 or 4 different therioes were tested and proven. Still some unanswered questions though. Interesting program.