Bermuda Triangle Case File
Bermuda Triangle Case File — Master Overview
The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, is a loosely defined region in the western North Atlantic Ocean, roughly bounded by three points: Miami, Florida; Bermuda; and Puerto Rico. The area encompasses approximately 500,000 square miles of open ocean and has been the subject of intense public fascination since the mid-20th century due to the alleged mysterious disappearances of ships, aircraft, and persons within its boundaries.
Designation and Geography
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Region | Western North Atlantic Ocean |
| Approximate area | 500,000 square miles (1,300,000 km²) |
| Boundary points | Miami, FL — Bermuda — San Juan, Puerto Rico |
| Alternative names | Devil's Triangle, Hurricane Alley |
| Ocean depth | Among the deepest in the Atlantic; Puerto Rico Trench reaches 27,493 ft |
| Governing authority | No formal governmental or nautical jurisdiction |
| Appears on official maps | No — not a recognized geographic designation |
Historical Origins of the Legend
The earliest documented suggestion of unusual disappearances in the Bermuda area appeared in an article by Edward Van Winkle Jones published in the Miami Herald and distributed by the Associated Press on September 17, 1950. Jones catalogued a number of aircraft and ship losses in the preceding years, presenting them as a pattern of anomalous events.
In 1952, Fate magazine published George X. Sand's article "Sea Mystery at Our Back Door," the first to describe the now-familiar triangular geography of the disappearance zone. The article discussed the loss of Flight 19 (1945), Star Tiger (1948), and the DC-3 NC16002 (1948) among others.
The term Bermuda Triangle was coined by writer Vincent Gaddis in his February 1964 article "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle," published in Argosy magazine. Gaddis subsequently expanded his article into the book Invisible Horizons (1965).
The legend reached its commercial and cultural peak with the publication of Charles Berlitz's The Bermuda Triangle (1974), which sold millions of copies worldwide and spawned a wave of popular books, films, and television documentaries.
Major Incidents Catalogued in This Case File
| Incident | Date | Type | Lives Lost | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USS Wasp (1814) | 1814 | Naval vessel | 140+ | Unresolved |
| Ellen Austin Ghost Ship Incident | 1881 | Merchant vessel | Unknown | Disputed/Unresolved |
| USS Cyclops Disappearance (1918) | 1918 | Naval cargo ship | 309 | Unresolved |
| Carroll A. Deering Ghost Ship (1921) | 1921 | Schooner | 0 (abandoned) | Unresolved |
| Star Tiger Disappearance (1948) | 1948 | Commercial aircraft | 33 | Unresolved |
| Douglas DC-3 NC16002 Disappearance (1948) | 1948 | Commercial aircraft | 39 | Unresolved |
| Star Ariel Disappearance (1949) | 1949 | Commercial aircraft | 20 | Unresolved |
| Flight 19 Disappearance (1945) | 1945 | Military aircraft (5 planes) | 27 | Unresolved |
| PBM Mariner Search Aircraft Explosion (1945) | 1945 | Military search aircraft | 13 | Likely explosion |
| USS Proteus Disappearance (1941) | 1941 | Naval cargo ship | 58 | Unresolved |
| USS Nereus Disappearance (1941) | 1941 | Naval cargo ship | 61 | Unresolved |
| Marine Sulphur Queen Disappearance (1963) | 1963 | Tanker | 39 | Unresolved |
| Witchcraft Disappearance (1967) | 1967 | Luxury cruiser | 2 | Unresolved |
| Great Isaac Lighthouse Keepers Vanishing (1969) | 1969 | Lighthouse personnel | 2 | Unresolved |
| Austin Stephanos and Perry Cohen (2015) | 2015 | Fishing vessel | 2 | Unresolved |
Proposed Explanations
Explanations for the alleged pattern of disappearances fall into several broad categories:
Natural and Scientific Theories
- Gulf Stream: The powerful ocean current can rapidly carry debris and wreckage far from the point of an accident, making recovery impossible.
- Methane hydrate eruptions: Deposits of frozen methane on the ocean floor may occasionally erupt, reducing water density and causing ships to sink rapidly without trace.
- Sudden severe weather: The region is prone to water spouts, sudden squalls, and hurricane-force weather that can arise with little warning.
- Human error: Navigator error, especially in an era of limited instrumentation, accounts for many incidents.
- Compass variations: The Triangle is one of few places where true north and magnetic north align, potentially causing historical compass errors.
Paranormal and Fringe Theories
- Atlantis crystal energy fields: Some researchers have proposed that the region overlies the ruins of Atlantis, and that ancient energy crystals interfere with navigation.
- Extraterrestrial activity: UFO abduction theories have been applied to several disappearances, particularly Flight 19.
- Time portals and dimensional rifts: Popular in fringe literature; no scientific basis established.
- Underwater alien bases: Alleged USO (Unidentified Submerged Objects) activity in the region has been cited in connection with disappearances.
Skeptical Analysis
Lawrence David Kusche, a librarian and pilot, published the definitive skeptical analysis in The Bermuda Triangle Mystery — Solved (1975). His research found:
- Many incidents occurred outside the Triangle boundaries
- Many were during known storms that Berlitz and others omitted from their accounts
- Several ships Berlitz listed as having disappeared without trace were found or had documented conventional explanations
- Some incidents never occurred at all, or occurred in different oceans
Lloyd's of London does not charge higher insurance premiums for ships transiting the Triangle, indicating the maritime insurance industry does not consider it a statistically anomalous risk zone.
The U.S. Coast Guard has stated: "In a review of many aircraft and vessel losses in the area over the years, there has been nothing discovered that would indicate that casualties were the result of anything other than physical causes. No extraordinary factors have ever been identified."
Christopher Columbus and Early Accounts
When Christopher Columbus sailed through the area in 1492 on his first voyage to the New World, he recorded in his log:
- A great flame of fire crashing into the sea (likely a meteor)
- A strange light appearing in the distance weeks later
- Erratic compass readings (likely due to the alignment of magnetic and true north in that sliver of ocean at the time)
These accounts, while historically documented, predate the Triangle legend by over four centuries and may represent entirely natural phenomena misinterpreted through the cultural lens of later Bermuda Triangle mythology.
