For decades, the Bermuda Triangle - the area between Florida, Puerto Rico, and the Bermuda Islands in the Atlantic - has been interpreted as a "mysterious vanishing point of ships and aircraft." However, it is emphasized that there are simple, verified explanations for more than 70 cases described as "unnatural," reports dailygalaxy.com.
The scientific community and naval experts explain that the statistics of this area are not distinguishable from other ocean corridors. The insurance company Lloyd's of London has never recognized this region as a special hazard zone. "There is no evidence here that mysterious disappearances are occurring more frequently than in other areas," the US Coast Guard and the NOAA said in an official statement.
What is the real danger? The first is huge "rogue waves." In some stormy conditions, the wave height can reach 20-30 meters, and even a large ship can be instantly engulfed. The second is the enormous speed of the Gulf Stream: it complicates navigation, slows down rescue operations, and exacerbates the consequences of minor mistakes.
The third factor is human error. Intense movement, distractions, incorrect equipment configuration, or incorrect decisions can be decisive. A famous example of this is the disappearance in 1945 of the famous "Flight 19": the captain of the group, Charles Taylor, lost his bearings, thought that he was still flying over Florida, and led the column towards the open ocean.
Another aspect related to the navigation process is the natural variability of the magnetic field. Magnetic declination and displacement of the "agontic line" can distort the compass reading under certain conditions. This is no secret - these corrections are regularly taken into account in naval maps and air navigation rules.
What has turned the Bermuda Triangle into a "hotbed of mysticism" is mainly mass culture. Multi-circulation books, Hollywood scripts, and the spread of legends like "methane hydrate explosions" and "crystal towers on the seabed" have disconnected events from their true scope and context. Where there is scientific evidence, there is no "secret," but a thirst for a good plot remains.
In this sense, the conclusion of the Australian scientist Karl Krushelnitsky is brief and sharp: why people still believe in these legends remains another puzzle. Because the facts show that the flow of ships and aircraft passing through the Bermuda Triangle is enormous - the probability of collisions, technical malfunctions, or human error statistically corresponds precisely to this.
The conclusion is clear: the Bermuda Triangle is not a mystery, but a place where the laws of nature, the logic of navigation, and human factors intersect. Myths can spread like thick fog, but the strongest thing that spreads them like the wind is proven scientific explanation and sound logic.
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