The Bermuda Triangle
is an area of mostly open ocean located between Bermuda, Miami, Florida
and San Juan, Puerto Rico. The unexplained disappearances of hundreds
of ships and airplanes in this area has made the Bermuda Triangle one of
the world’s most notorious unsolved mysteries.
Recent Aircraft and Boat Disappearances
According to Bermuda-Triangle.org,
around 129 planes have disappeared over the waters in the Bermuda
Triangle between 1945 and 2008. After 2008, documented cases of
unexplained aircraft disappearances in the area simply seem to stop,
which deepens the mystery of the Bermuda Triangle even more. Detailed
information about aircraft disappearances that occurred during World War
II and shortly afterward can be found from numerous sources, as these
events have become legendary in the unexplained and paranormal world.
However, reports on recent unexplained aircraft disappearances are much harder to find, possibly because of advances in modern technology. The three most recent include:
- 2005- June 20, a Piper PA- 23 vanished between Treasure Cay, Bahamas and Ft Pierce, Florida with three people aboard
- 2007- April 10, a Piper PA- 46-310P disappeared near Berry Islands with only the pilot on board
- 2008- December 15, a Britten Norman Islander vanished near the Windward Islands with 11 passengers aboard
Not all disappearances are related to mysterious circumstances, but
the number is staggering when you calculate the odds of so many aircraft
and ships disappearing in a specific region. Obviously, a percentage
would be due to engine failures, squalls and other sudden storms.
- June 18, 2003 – Frank and Romina Leone left
Boynton Beach Inlet, Florida in their 16-foot boat for a day excursion.
They and their boat were never found. The couple was fondly remembered
in a June 24, 2003, SunSentinel
article that reports Romina was looking forward to her first fishing
trip on the boat with her husband, Frank. The Leones launched their boat
on a Wednesday afternoon and when the young couple failed to show up at
each of their jobs in West Palm Beach in the next couple of days,
coworkers, friends and family feared the worst. The Coast Guard launched
a rescue mission early Friday morning, which covered over 35,700 square
miles from Miami to Savannah, Georgia before it was called off around 6
pm the following Monday. - October-November, 2003 – A fishing boat with the
tragically ironic name of “What’s Left” was found capsized on a beach
near Cape Canaveral. In an article published by NaplesNews.com, human
remains found on the boat were believed to be one of the missing
boaters: Gary Lisk, 61, Neil Eddleman, 47 and son, Neil Allen Eddleman,
13, who left on October 17 for a day fishing trip. The wreckage washed
up 527 miles away from where the trio had launched at Gordon Pass. How
the boat ended up where it was found baffled authorities, who could only
speculate that the boat may have been caught in the Atlantic Gulf
Stream, a slow moving current that travels up the eastern U.S. coast. - March 23, 2004 – A 19-foot fishing boat owned by
40-year-old fishing enthusiast Glen Jamison left Hudson, Florida around 4
am Sunday, and was scheduled to return that night. The boat was
discovered 32 miles west of Egmont Key, Florida, but Jamison was
missing. According to the St. Petersburg Times,
although Jamison loved to fish he could not swim at all. When the boat
was found, the engine was tilted up with fishing line wrapped around the
propeller. A nearby knife led family members and authorities to the
conclusion that Jamison had been trying to cut the fishing line off of
the propeller when he fell overboard.
Mysterious Problems and Close Calls
In posts appearing on both World Mysteries, a blog dedicated to unsolved mysteries and DiscloseTV,
a news hub dedicated to unexplained phenomena, passengers on large,
modern aircraft may be counting their blessings as survivors who just
escaped being caught in the Triangle’s spooky web:
- March 26, 2001 – ComAir flight 5054 shook up
passengers on a flight from Nassau to Orlando, when the plane began
rolling from side to side and went into a deep dive. The plane managed
to land safely in West Palm Beach but sustained serious damage to key
tail components. Problems began when ice started to cover the
windshield, the right engine, and right wing. Although the crew reacted
quickly by turning on the plane’s anti-icing system at the highest
level, the plane began to roll and then dive. Important flight
instruments also began to fail at this time. 1995
– Cary Gordon Trantham had a close call as a pilot of a small, private
Piper Warrior when she was returning home after spending time with her
daughter in the Florida Keys. While flying over the open water at night,
she suddenly felt as if a dark blanket of fog had been thrown over her
plane. The horizon disappeared and she couldn’t see lights of any kind,
just total blackness. At this point, a pilot can only rely on the
plane’s instruments to keep it level and at a safe altitude.
Unfortunately, the compass had gone erratic, the panel lights were
fluctuating from dim to bright, the altitude indicator began to roll and
there was a buzzing sound in her headset. You can find out how she
escaped a tragic ending by visiting her website, Bermuda Triangle Survivor. Her story has been featured on the Discovery Channel, The Learning Channel, Syfy network, and National Geographic.
Other Recent Phenomenon
Two more recent disappearances reported at Bermuda-Attractions.com
continue to deepen the mystery of the Triangle. Although these
disappearances happened as late as the 1990s, details are still limited.
- 1991 – The last known contact with the pilot of
a Grumman Cougar jet occurred when he made a routine radio request to
increase altitude. As the aircraft flew higher into the atmosphere, It
gradually faded from radar and then vanished altogether. - 1999 – A distress call received by a vessel sailing
near a cargo freighter called the Genesis reported the ship was having
problems with the bilge pump. After this call, the ship and crew were
never seen or heard from again, despite intensive and ongoing searches
by the Coast Guard.
Possible Reasons for the Recent Lull in Bermuda Triangle Phenomenon
A plausible theory as to why the strange phenomenon of missing
vessels and aircraft has literally become a thing of the past may be the
technological advances in navigation, including GPS (Global Positioning
Systems). It could also be possible that the danger zone has somehow
moved.
The most recent bizarre disappearance of an aircraft over the
tropical waters of the Caribbean happened just south of the Bermuda
Triangle. “The Los Roques Curse,” as locals refer to it, is an area
between Caracas, Venezuela and the 350 islands, cays and islets that
make up the Los Roques island chain, where similar unexplained
disappearances of ships and aircraft have been occurring since the
1990s. In a February, 2013 article published by the Huffington Post,
acclaimed Italian fashion designer Vittorio Missoni and five companions
boarded a BN-2 Islander aircraft in the Los Roques Island chain on
January 4, 2013, headed for Caracas, Venezuela. After the plane had
flown about 11 miles, it vanished into thin air. No wreckage from the
plane or bodies were ever recovered, despite hundreds of search efforts.
Determining the Truth
As the activity in the Bermuda Triangle
appears to wane and eventually stop altogether in the 21st century,
could the anomaly have simply shifted a few hundred miles to the south?
Or is it purely a coincidence that unexplained disappearances in boat
and plane traffic has almost simultaneously been on the increase in an
area so close? Like most paranormal phenomenon and unsolved mysteries,
the truth will remain a matter of one’s personal belief.
Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/jf_BVm7psAI/recent-disappearances-strangeness-in.html
Recent Disappearances & Strangeness in the Bermuda Triangle
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