The Bermuda Triangle:
What’s Really Going on There?
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The mysterious region of the Atlantic Ocean between Florida, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico has captivated the imagination of explorers, writers, and ordinary people for decades. The history of the Bermuda Triangle is replete with mysterious disappearances of ships and planes, giving rise to numerous theories — from the scientific to the downright fantastical. However, modern research reveals that behind these seemingly supernatural phenomena lie powerful forces of nature and human error.
2 Famous disappearances
3 Scientific explanations of the phenomenon
4 Paranormal theories and myths
5 The official position of the authorities
6 Statistical reality
7 Modern research
8 Debunking myths
9 Solving the mystery
The Birth of a Legend
The history of the Bermuda Triangle began with the first European explorer to cross its waters. Christopher Columbus, in 1492, during his historic voyage to the New World, recorded strange phenomena in his log. The navigator described compass failures, unusual lights in the sky, and a "great flame" falling into the ocean — likely a meteor.

Columbus observed the compass needle begin to point to true north instead of magnetic north, alarming the experienced crew. A few days later, the crew saw strange moving lights in the sky, which would disappear and then reappear. The most striking sighting was of a glowing disk-shaped object emerging from the water and soaring into the sky.
The waters Columbus sailed through were already notorious among sailors. The Sargasso Sea, located in this region, was known for its floating seaweed, calm seas, and strange currents. Portuguese sailors called it the "sea of seaweed," and legends told of ships forever stuck in the sargassum beds.
The modern name "Bermuda Triangle" only appeared in the 20th century. Writer Vincent Gaddis first used the term in his article "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle" for Argosy magazine in February 1964. Gaddis described a triangular region between Florida, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico where unexplained disappearances of ships and aircraft allegedly occurred.
Famous disappearances
USS Cyclops: The Worst Maritime Disaster
In March 1918, a disappearance occurred that became one of the most mysterious in maritime history. The 165-meter-long American military transport USS Cyclops left the port of Salvador, Brazil, bound for Baltimore with a cargo of 10,800 tons of manganese ore.
The ship had 306 crew and passengers on board. Captain George Worley reported a malfunction in the starboard engine — a cracked cylinder made it inoperable. Despite this, the ship was expected to reach its destination without difficulty.
On March 3, 1918, the USS Cyclops made an unscheduled stop in Barbados to replenish coal and provisions. Afterward, the ship disappeared without a trace. No distress signals were sent, and no wreckage was found. This became the largest non-combat loss of life in the history of the American Navy.
Captain Worley, a German by birth, aroused suspicion among the crew due to his despotic behavior. Some theories suggested he may have been a double agent who handed the ship over to the enemy. Other theories pointed to overloading, structural weakness, or an explosion of the manganese cargo.
Flight 19 - The Lost Patrol
On December 5, 1945, five TBM Avenger torpedo bombers, designated "Flight 19," took off from Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on a routine training mission. The flight commander was Lieutenant Charles Taylor, a seasoned pilot with combat experience from World War II.
The route was a triangle: first east to the Bahamas to bomb the sunken ship, then north and back west to base. The weather was good, and the aircraft were in good condition.
About an hour and a half after takeoff, Taylor reported that his compasses had failed and he was disoriented. The pilot was convinced he was over the Florida Keys, although in reality, the flight was flying over open ocean northeast of the Bahamas.
Ground controllers tried to help, suggesting Taylor fly west toward the Florida coast. However, the flight commander insisted on flying northeast, believing Florida lay in that direction. Flight 19’s last message came around 7:20 PM, when Taylor reported the planes were running low on fuel.
A PBM Mariner flying boat with 13 crew members was dispatched to search for the missing flight. Twenty minutes after takeoff, this aircraft also disappeared from radar. Witnesses saw an explosion in the air — most likely, the plane exploded due to a fuel leak.
A massive search involving nearly 300 aircraft, four destroyers, 18 Coast Guard vessels, and numerous civilian vessels yielded no results. Not a single piece of debris was found in an area of approximately 380,000 square kilometers.
Other mysterious cases
The story of the Ellen Austin in 1881 added to the region’s mystique. A steamship encountered a drifting, crewless phantom vessel at sea. The captain sent his men aboard the mysterious vessel, but after a storm, they disappeared. When the Ellen Austin encountered the same vessel again, its crew was once again missing.
In 1948, the British South American Airways passenger jet Star Tiger disappeared. The plane was flying from London to Havana via Bermuda with 31 people on board. The last radio contact was made as the plane approached Bermuda in normal weather conditions.
A year later, a Star Ariel aircraft belonging to the same airline disappeared in the same area. It vanished en route from Bermuda to Kingston, Jamaica. Neither aircraft has ever been found, despite extensive searches.
Scientific explanations of the phenomenon
Magnetic anomalies and navigation problems
The Bermuda Triangle is one of the few areas on Earth where a magnetic compass points to true north instead of magnetic north. This can be confusing for navigators unfamiliar with local conditions.
Magnetic anomalies in the region are associated with underwater iron-rich mineral deposits. Variations in the Earth’s magnetic field can cause serious navigational errors, especially in the pre-satellite era.
Research shows that local magnetic fields are strong enough to interfere with compasses. For ships and aircraft relying on magnetic navigation, such disturbances could mean death.
The Gulf Stream and extreme weather events
The Gulf Stream is a powerful ocean current that passes through the Bermuda Triangle. This current carries warm water from the Gulf of Mexico northeastward across the Atlantic, influencing weather and climate.
The presence of the Gulf Stream explains the rapid and sometimes violent weather changes in the region. The current can cause sudden storms, waterspouts, and "white squalls" — intense hurricanes that appear without warning.
Waterspouts, essentially sea tornadoes, are particularly dangerous to small vessels and low-flying aircraft. They can form quickly and reach destructive force, capable of sinking a ship or bringing down an aircraft.
The Gulf Stream also helps explain why shipwrecks are rarely found in the Bermuda Triangle. The powerful current quickly carries any remains far from the crash site, making searches virtually hopeless.
Giant killer waves
Dr. Simon Boxall of the University of Southampton has proposed a scientific explanation for the many disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle. He believes the cause lies in so-called "rogue waves" — sudden walls of water up to 30 meters high.
These giant waves form when storms from different directions interact. When waves from two or three different storm systems meet, they can amplify each other, turning a typical 10-meter wave into a 20-30-meter wall of water.
Boxall and his colleagues built a scale model of the USS Cyclops to test their theory. Experiments showed that the ship’s flat bottom and enormous size made it particularly vulnerable to giant waves. When such a wave hits the ship, it can suspend it between the wave peaks, leaving the center unsupported. Under these conditions, the ship simply breaks in half.
"If this happens, the vessel can sink in two to three minutes," Boxall explains. For a ship like the Cyclops, this meant no time to send a distress signal and virtually no chance of rescue.
Hexagonal clouds and air bombs
In 2016, meteorologists discovered unusual hexagonal clouds over the Bermuda Triangle using satellite imagery. The clouds, ranging in diameter from 32 to 88 kilometers, could create dangerous air currents.
Dr. Randy Cerveny of the University of Arizona explained that these formations are "air bombs." They are formed by microbursts — powerful downdrafts of air that strike the ocean surface, generating winds of up to 270 kilometers per hour and waves over 13 meters high.
Radar images of similar clouds over the North Sea confirmed winds of approximately 160 kilometers per hour. Such conditions could sink a ship or bring down an aircraft in minutes.
However, other meteorologists have expressed doubts about the applicability of this theory to the Bermuda Triangle. NBC’s Kevin Corriveau noted that weather conditions in the Caribbean and North Sea are too different for direct comparison. Hexagonal clouds over the Bahamas could have formed due to uneven heating of the air over the small islands.
Methane emissions from the seabed
One intriguing theory links the disappearances to methane emissions from the seafloor. Scientists suggest that deposits of methane hydrates — frozen natural gas — may explode underwater, creating enormous gas bubbles.
When large quantities of methane rise to the surface, the density of water decreases sharply. Ships lose buoyancy and can sink instantly. For aircraft, methane in the atmosphere can disrupt engine operation or cause explosions.
Research has revealed the presence of large deposits of methane hydrates in the Atlantic. Russian scientists have linked the formation of giant craters in Siberia to explosive methane emissions from permafrost.
Benjamin Frampus of Southern Methodist University in Dallas has confirmed the existence of significant reserves of methane hydrates along the North American continental margin, including the area north of the Bermuda Triangle.
However, the US Geological Survey has found no evidence of major gas emissions in the Bermuda Triangle over the past 15,000 years. This casts doubt on the methane theory as an explanation for modern extinctions.
Paranormal theories and myths
Connection with Atlantis
Among the most exotic explanations for the Bermuda Triangle is a connection to the legendary Atlantis. Edgar Cayce, the renowned American mystic, predicted in his "readings" that the remains of Atlantis would be found near Bimini in the Bahamas.
In 1968, exactly on time as Case predicted, an underwater rock formation dubbed the "Bimini Road" was discovered. Some researchers saw it as the remains of an ancient civilization, although most geologists consider it a natural formation.
Case claimed that Atlantis was a technologically advanced civilization that used crystals to generate energy. He believed these crystals still radiate energy from the ocean floor, which could affect the operation of compasses and engines.
In 2001, marine engineers Pauline Zalitsky and Paul Weinzweig discovered massive polished granite structures at a depth of 750 meters off the coast of Cuba. Samples revealed fossils of surface organisms, indicating submergence.
Alien theories
The Bermuda Triangle is often associated with extraterrestrial activity. Proponents of this theory claim that the region serves as a portal for UFO travel.
Numerous reports of UFO sightings in the triangle area fuel these theories. Some witnesses report encounters with ghost ships and luminous underwater objects.
Steven Spielberg’s 1977 film Close Encounters of the Third Kind exploited the story of Flight 19, depicting aliens recovering missing aircraft and their crews. This further cemented the connection between the Bermuda Triangle and UFOs in the public consciousness.
However, there is no scientifically confirmed evidence of the presence of extraterrestrial technology in the region. Alleged UFOs most often turn out to be meteors, light reflections, or ordinary aircraft in unusual atmospheric conditions.
Temporal anomalies and the portal
Another popular theory suggests the existence of rifts in the space-time continuum in the Bermuda Triangle. According to this theory, ships and planes don’t disappear, but are transported to another time or dimension.
Some eyewitness accounts describe unexplained time distortions in the region. Pilots reported flights that took significantly less or more time than expected.
The electron fog theory suggests that strange cloud formations can create temporal anomalies. However, physicists have found no scientific basis for such phenomena.
The official position of the authorities
U.S. Coast Guard
The US Coast Guard does not officially recognize the Bermuda Triangle as a geographic high-risk area. A review of numerous ship and aircraft losses in the region found no evidence of causes other than physical ones.
"Our experience shows that the combined forces of nature and human unpredictability exceed science fiction stories many times a year," the Coast Guard stated in its official conclusion.
The United States Board on Geographic Names does not recognize the Bermuda Triangle as an official name and maintains no official records of the area. There are no official maps of the region, and the Coast Guard collects and publishes incident reports that refute any mysterious explanations.
NOAA - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
NOAA officially stated in 2010 that there is no evidence of more frequent disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle than in any other large, heavily used ocean area.
The organization attributes the disappearances in the triangle to natural factors. NOAA cites the Gulf Stream’s tendency to cause sudden weather changes, the numerous islands in the Caribbean Sea that complicate navigation, and the region’s magnetic field.
"The U.S. Navy and Coast Guard maintain that there are no supernatural explanations for disasters at sea," NOAA concludes. Their experience shows that the combined forces of nature and human error trump even the wildest science fiction.
Insurance companies
Lloyd’s of London, the world’s leading insurance market, has maintained the same rates for ships passing through the Bermuda Triangle as for other areas with similar traffic volumes since the 1970s.
Lloyd’s internal research shows that the region is no more dangerous than other busy shipping lanes. The company does not charge special premiums for vessels transiting the area.
A statistical analysis of maritime and aviation incidents (1982-2015) by the U.S. Coast Guard confirmed that the frequency of disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle is no higher than in other regions. This finding supports the characterization of the topic as a "man-made mystery."
Statistical reality
Traffic intensity
Since 2017, Australian scientist Karl Krushelnytsky has been consistently debunking the Bermuda Triangle myth. He points out that the region is located close to the equator, near the richest part of the world — the Americas — and therefore experiences very heavy traffic.
"The number of ships and aircraft disappearing here is the same — in percentage terms — as anywhere else in the world," Krushelnytsky asserts. The more ships and aircraft in any given area, the more incidents will be recorded.
The region is truly one of the world’s busiest sea and air corridors. Hundreds of ships and dozens of planes pass through it daily. With such traffic volume, accidents are statistically inevitable.
Comparative analysis
Research shows that the Bermuda Triangle is no different from other busy maritime areas in terms of the number of incidents. The proportion of disappearances is consistent with the global average for areas with similar traffic volumes.
Many of the supposedly "mysterious" disappearances have perfectly understandable causes. Bad weather, human error, and technical malfunctions are common causes of maritime and aviation disasters.
In some cases, the disappearances turned out to be fiction or greatly exaggerated stories. Authors of books and articles about the triangle often ignored natural explanations and invented mysteries where none existed.
Modern research
Technological advances
The development of GPS satellite navigation systems has virtually eliminated navigational problems that could lead to accidents in the past. Modern ships and aircraft are equipped with multiple safety and communication systems.
Satellite tracking makes it possible to pinpoint the location of any vessel or aircraft almost instantly. This significantly reduces search and rescue time in emergency situations. Automatic distress alert systems transmit distress signals even when manual activation is impossible.
Modern meteorological satellites provide accurate weather forecasts, helping to avoid dangerous storms. Radar systems detect microbursts and other hazardous atmospheric phenomena.
Oceanographic research
Modern oceanographic research has significantly expanded our understanding of currents, waves, and other marine phenomena in the region. Scientists have studied in detail the behavior of the Gulf Stream and its influence on local weather.
Studies of giant waves have shown that they can indeed reach heights of 30 meters or more. Satellite observations have recorded such waves in various parts of the world’s oceans, confirming their destructive power.
Seafloor studies have revealed the region’s complex geology, with deep trenches and seamounts. The deepest point in the Atlantic, the Milwaukee Trench at 8,380 meters, is located in the Bermuda Triangle.
Climate research
Climate data analysis has shown that the Bermuda Triangle is prone to extreme weather events. The region regularly experiences tropical storms, hurricanes, and other hazardous weather conditions.
Research has shown a link between changes in the Gulf Stream and climate fluctuations. A weakening of this current can lead to increased storm activity in the region.
Studying historical climate data through stalagmite analysis in Bermuda has allowed us to trace changes in ocean temperatures over the past 500 years. This data helps us understand long-term climate trends in the region.
Debunking myths
Media distortion of facts
The history of the Bermuda Triangle is largely a product of media sensationalism. Authors of popular books and articles in the 1960s and 1970s significantly exaggerated the number and mystery of disappearances.
In his 1974 book "The Bermuda Triangle," Charles Berlitz added numerous mythical elements to real events. Richard Wiener, in "The Devil’s Triangle" of the same year, continued this tradition. These authors often ignored obvious explanations in favor of sensational theories.
Television shows and films further romanticized the triangle’s history. A 1976 NOVA documentary concluded, "Science shouldn’t answer questions about the triangle because those questions are fundamentally wrong."
Critical analysis of cases
A detailed study of "mysterious" disappearances often reveals perfectly understandable causes. Flight 19, for example, was lost due to navigational errors in deteriorating weather conditions.
The disappearance of the USS Cyclops could have been caused by a structural failure, overload, or a storm. The lack of radio signal is explained by the speed of the disaster, which left no time to transmit a message.
Many other cases, upon closer inspection, turn out to be ordinary accidents caused by bad weather or human error. The lack of debris is explained by the Gulf Stream, which carries debris far from the crash site.
Scientific consensus
The overwhelming majority of scientists agree that the Bermuda Triangle poses no particular danger. No anomalous physical phenomena have been detected in the region.
Oceanographers, meteorologists, navigation experts, and other specialists unanimously reject supernatural explanations. All recorded cases have rational explanations.
Insurance companies basing their calculations on actuarial data see no increased risk in the region. This is the most compelling evidence of the absence of a real danger.
Solving the mystery
Modern research convincingly demonstrates that the Bermuda Triangle mystery is a man-made myth. The region is no more dangerous than any other busy sea and air corridor.
The disappearances of ships and aircraft in the triangle are explained by a combination of natural factors and human error. Extreme weather conditions, difficult navigation, heavy traffic, and random chance create the illusion of a supernatural phenomenon.
The Gulf Stream, with its unpredictable weather patterns, giant rogue waves, magnetic anomalies, and potential methane emissions, pose real but understandable dangers. These natural phenomena are powerful enough to destroy a ship or aircraft without leaving a trace.
The development of modern navigation and communication technologies has virtually eliminated the conditions that could have led to "mysterious" disappearances in the past. Satellite tracking, accurate weather forecasts, and automated safety systems make modern travel through the Bermuda Triangle no more dangerous than through any other part of the world’s oceans.
The myth of the Bermuda Triangle serves as a reminder of how the confluence of real natural hazards, human imagination, and commercial interests can create an enduring legend. The true story of this region is no less compelling than any fictional theory — it is a tale of the power of nature, the limitations of human knowledge, and the gradual triumph of the scientific method over superstition.