| Off the southern tip of Florida lies a phenomenon called the Bermuda
Triangle. Ships, planes, and over one thousand lives were lost in the Triangle
without a trace. Theories have been put forth, but still no universally accepted
explanation exists for the mystery that surrounds the Bermuda Triangle.
The
Bermuda Triangle covers almost 440,000 square miles of the Atlantic Ocean. An
imaginary line that begins near Melbourne, Florida, extends south to Bermuda,
and west to Puerto Rico before turning north to Florida, forms the Triangle.
From 1972-1999, more than one hundred planes and ships have vanished into thin
air. More than one thousand lives have been lost as well. One frightening aspect
of this entire saga is that disappearances continue to occur at an alarming
rate. A small part of the Bermuda Triangle lies in the Sargasso Sea. This
sea is best known for its tall, thick, floating seaweed called Sargassum. The
seaweed is thought to be a forest that once rested on an island in the Atlantic
Ocean. According to legend, the island sank at a very quick pace, taking with it
the forest and vegetation.
One of the most notable disappearances is that of
Flight 19. This was basically what started the craze. The flight consisted of
five Navy TBM Avenger torpedo bomber planes. Mechanics had certified the planes
fit for flight. Flight planes were checked thoroughly and appropriately filed
with the proper authorities. There were no indications that this mission would
be anything other than a routine experience for the crews of these aircraft.
Even the weather was cooperation. The forecast predicted clear skies and calm
winds. Flight 19 left the Fort Lauderdale Airport at 2:10 p.m. on December
5, 1945. At 3:40 p.m. Lieutenant Robert Cox noticed his radio begin to crackle.
The transmission seemed to be directed to “Powers.” The person identified
himself as FT-28, the call sign for Flight 19. FT-28 radioed that both of his
compasses were out, and he was trying to find land.(Kusch)
At 4:26 p.m. Fort
Everglades Rescue intercepted a transmission from FT-28. Immediately, the rescue
team called several stations along the coast and asked them to turn on their
radar and attempt to locate the lost flight. At 6:04 p.m. Lieutenant Taylor
radioed his flight crew to tell them they were off course and needed to adjust
their course to a more easterly direction. That exercise appears to have
mysteriously taken them further from land. At 7:04 p.m. all radio communication
ceased. (Kusch, 106, 114) In an attempt to find the lost flight, a Martin
Mariner PBM-5 flying boat was sent to search for the mission squadron. The
flying boat left Fort Lauderdale Airport at 7:27 p.m. (Cusack, 16). At 7:30 p.m.
the plane’s radio failed, and flight disappeared forever. By dawn on
December 6, 1945, the largest search and rescue mission over air and sea was
underway. Before the sun would rise that day, over 240 planes and 18 ships
would be deployed to search for Flight 19. Later that morning, the Royal Air
Force would send out planes to assist in the search. Numerous land teams
would crisscross the Bahamas and the Florida Keys searching in vain for signs of
survivors or wreckage that may have washed ashore. One search and rescue ship,
the S.S. Gaines Mills, radioed at 7:50 p.m. that they had observed a burst of
flames that rose one hundred feet high and lasted for about ten minutes. Ships
and planes rushed to the area, but no signs of debris or survivors were found.
After five days of intense searching, the rescue mission was canceled. No
wreckage, survivors, or explanations were found for the disappearance of Flight
19. Forty-six years later, May 8, 1991, a computer-controlled submarine
scanned the ocean floor for sunken galleons. On this day, the crew of the Deep
Sea would be unsuccessful in their search for galleons. Instead, 750 feet below
the surface of the ocean, they would discover the outline of an airplane that
clearly appeared to be a Navy Avenger. Two hundred yards away they discovered
another plane and eventually accounted for five aircraft.(Naval) The planes
appear to have been ditched. The canopies were open, and some of the propellers
were bent back. One of the planes had the marking “FT” on its side, which was
the designation for Fort Lauderdale. The plane also had the number 28 on it,
which was Lieutenant Taylor’s plane number. (Kusch, Several theories have
been submitted to the Navy, civilian government officials, and newspapers
regarding the disappearance of this flight. An engineer in New York submitted a
set of very detailed drawings in which he depicted the five planes and the
flying boat in a massive mid-air collision. Unfortunately, the drawings left too
many questions unanswered. Many theories insisted the wind blew the planes off
course; however, the Navy insisted that the prevailing winds on this night were
not strong enough to support such a theory. Airplanes aren’t the only things
disappearing in the Bermuda Triangle. Many large and obviously heavy ships and
tankers, approximately twenty, have disappeared as well. One of the more
intriguing disappearances was that of a U.S. Navy supply ship. Known as the
U.S.S. Cyclops, it measured over five hundred feet long and weighed more than
nineteen thousand tons. The ship set sail on March 4, 1918, during World War
I. The oddest thing about this ship was its crew. The captain was a German who
was thought to be mentally ill because he often walked about the ship in long
underwear and a derby hat. Among the passengers were the former U.S. Consul to
Brazil, three naval prisoners under indictment for murder, and two AWOL marines.
The U.S.S. Cyclops disappeared without a trace. No record exists of a distressed
radio communication coming from the area. Researchers do not believe the ship
encountered bad weather, and no wreckage was ever discovered. Many have
suggested that a tidal wave struck and flipped the U.S.S. Cyclops, but did not
sink the huge vessel. The Navy quickly discounted that theory because the ship
was not in a storm and no wreckage was found. Others thought that the German
captain took over and held the ship, but the government never found any trace of
the ship or the crew after the war. Not only have ships disappeared in the
Triangle, but also many ships have been found with no one aboard. One very
mysterious case involved a boat called the Mary Celeste. In November 1972, a
ship came upon the Mary Celeste and hailed her. After receiving no reply, the
captain boarded her and found the boat deserted. All sails were cast, and the
casks of cargo she was carrying were untouched. There was plenty of food and
water onboard, but the crew of ten was nowhere to be found. Money, personal
possessions, and even the captain’s log were still intact on the boat. The most
unusual circumstances were that of the captain’s room, which was boarded up as
if to repel attackers. The captain who stumbled upon her took the boat, and to
this day there is no explanation for the disappearance of the crew. Numerous
industrial and commercial airliners have been lost in the Bermuda Triangle.
British South American Airways had a short, unhappy life due to the Triangle.
The airline lost three large planes. Two of them, the Star Tiger and the Star
Ariel, vanished without a trace. Later, the Star Dust disappeared with no
explanation near Santiago, Chile. The Star Ariel was on a flight to Chile on
January 17, 1949, when it stopped in Bermuda for a brief rest. Upon continuation
of its journey, the pilot radioed the command center that he was changing radio
frequencies because of static on the line. The plane and its passengers were
never heard from again. The plane was lost close to the same location as her
sister plane, the Star Tiger, almost exactly one year earlier. In 1969, a
National Airlines 727 passenger plane was approaching the Miami Airport in
anticipation of landing. While being closely tracked by the Miami Air Control
Center, the plane suddenly disappeared from the radar screen. Ten minutes later,
the plane reappeared on the screen and landed without incident. Upon arrival at
the terminal, the flight crew was surprised to hear that their plane had
temporarily and mysteriously disappeared. Flight instruments were checked for
accuracy with no abnormalities discovered. Suddenly, a member of the flight crew
noticed his watch was ten minutes behind that of a ground crew member. The rest
of the flight crew soon confirmed their watched were also ten minutes slow. This
was especially odd because the flight crew had performed a routine time check
only twenty minutes before the incident, and at that time there was no
difference. Many unidentified objects have been seen entering and leaving
the sea and in the sky. Captain Dan Delmonico is a lifelong sailor. His
reputation is that of a calm observer not susceptible to over-reacting. He made
two almost identical observations in April 1973. Both sightings were made at
about four o’clock in the afternoon. He saw a gray object shoot through the
water directly in front of his boat. He guessed its size to be 150 to 200 feet
long and its speed to be at least sixty to seventy miles per hour. As it
approached, it veered around the boat to pass as if it knew he was there. As it
passed, he noticed that it invoked no turbulence and the surface of the water
never broke. This is unlike any submersible known to man. Some say it would be
impossible for an object that size to cause no turbulence as close to the
surface as it was. Although many lives have been lost in the Triangle,
people have survived crises in this area. People from all walks of life have
proposed several theories about these abnormalities. Suggestions that a gigantic
octopus exists seem too far-fetched. Scientists studying the conditions in the
Triangle agree that it could be an atmospheric, gravitational, or
electromagnetic disturbance. Many doctors of science also submitted suggestions.
Dr. Manson Valentine suggested a magnetic phenomenon that could have been set up
by flying saucer. Dr. Stanley Krippner believed a black hole in space, called a
vortex, existed where planes and ships that entered the Triangle did not come
out. (Kusch) In spite of today’s advanced technology, scientists are no
closer to solving the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle. Only the stories exist to
explain the loss of over one hundred planes and more than one thousand live to
this “Triangle of Terror.” The discovery of Flight 19 raised more questions than
it answered. No matter how it’s looked at something does happen whether it has a
scientific explanation or not in “The Bermuda Triangle”. It can’t be denied that
nothing happens there with all of the recorded tragedies on this area. The way
to look at it is documentation is proof so it does exist.
Works
Cited
Baumann, Elwood D. The Devil’s Triangle. Franklin Watts: New York,
1976
Berlitz, Charles. The Bermuda Triangle: An Incredible Saga of
Unexplained
Disappearances. Doubleday and Company, Inc.: New York, 1974
Burnvand, Jan Herold. “Bermuda Triangle.” Encarta Encyclopedia. 1999 ed.
Jeffrey, Kent Thomas. Triangle of Terror and Other Eerie Areas. Warner
Books: New York, 1975
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