Another Boat With Passengers Mysteriously Disappeared In The Bermuda Triangle

Cynthia McKanzie – MessageToEagle.com – Over the years many have tried to explain what causes the disappearances of large ships, aircraft, and boats in the Bermuda Triangle, a section of the North Atlantic Ocean off North America.

The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil’s Triangle, is not a place you will find on any official map, but according to some people who have been there, you will feel it when you have crossed the line.

Another Boat With Passengers Mysteriously Disappeared In The Bermuda Triangle

Why do aircraft, ships, and boats vanish in the Bermuda Triangle? Image source

Ever since a magazine coined the phrase “Bermuda Triangle” in 1964, this mysterious place has continued to attract attention. The Bermuda Triangle is an area of between 500,000-1,500,000 square miles, depending on who one asks. It is never found on any government-issued map because it does not officially exist.

The exact number of those who never returned after crossing the Bermuda Triangle is unknown. but records show as many as more than 50 ships and 20 airplanes have mysteriously disappeared.

What unknown forces are responsible for the vanishing of these large and heavy vehicles is a matter of debate. Some blame the disappearances on extraterrestrial while other are convinced we are dealing with natural forces of some kind. It has been proposed that there is an anomalous phenomenon we still haven’t been able to locate or identify.

Compass problems are often reported by ships and aircraft that cross the region and this has made some think that unusual local magnetic anomalies may exist in the area.

Other natural explanations often mentioned are severe weather, human error, and large fields of methane hydrates (a form of natural gas) on the continental shelves.

“There is a version that the Bermuda Triangle is a consequence of gas hydrates reactions. They start to actively decompose with methane ice turning into gas. It happens in an avalanche-like way, like a nuclear reaction, producing huge amounts of gas. That makes the ocean heat up and ships sink in its waters mixed with a huge proportion of gas. The same [method] leads to the air getting supersaturated with methane, which makes the atmosphere extremely turbulent and leads to aircraft crashes,” Russian scientist Igor Yeltsov, the deputy head of the Trofimuk Institute, said.

According to a more recent theory put forward by meteorologists, mysterious vanishings of ships and aircraft in the Bermuda Triangle can be blamed on unusual hexagonal clouds.

Researchers reached this conclusion by examining imagery from a NASA satellite. When researchers measured, what was happening beneath the clouds they discovered that the sea level winds were reaching almost 170 miles an hour – powerful enough to generate waves of over 45 feet high – as ‘air bombs’ are forced to come crashing down towards the ocean. Scientists also note that these peculiar clouds have straight edges.

Presently, these are just theories and we still do not why aircraft, ships and boats vanish in the Bermuda Triangle.

What we do know with certainty is that yet another boat has been reposted gone missing while entering the Bermuda Triangle.

Another Boat With Passengers Mysteriously Disappeared In The Bermuda Triangle

The Coast Guard search area for a missing 29-foot boat with 20 people aboard reported missing in the waters between the Bahamas and South Florida — an area that encompasses the mythical section of the Atlantic oft-dubbed the Bermuda Triangle or Devil’s Triangle. [ Coast Guard ]

On December 29, 2020, Bahamian authorities reached out to the U.S. Coast Guard’s Southeast Division to alert them that 20 people aboard a blue and white 29-foot Mako Cuddy Cabin vessel had gone missing. The boat had entered the dangerous Bermuda Triangle.

“The group, yet to be identified, was last known to have left Bimini on Monday en route to Lake Worth, the Coast Guard learned. They should have arrived that day,” Tampa Bay Times reports.

Something, we do not know what went wrong and a rescue mission was launched.

On December 31, 2020, “after searching for about 84 hours and more than 17,000 square miles — roughly double the size of Massachusetts, the Coast Guard said — rescuers that included Air Station crews from Miami and Clearwater suspended their search.

“Our thoughts and prayers go out to the families of the missing people,” Capt. Stephen V. Burdian of the Seventh District said in a statement. “I encourage anyone with information about the people aboard to contact us as soon as possible.”

 

Anyone with information on the crew of the Mako Cuddy Cabin or its whereabouts is asked to contact the District Seven Command Center at 305-415-6800.

Jose Hernandez, U.S. Coast Guard Public Affairs Petty Officer First Class, told CBS12 News that rough waters and the limited information they had on the boaters proved especially challenging during the search and rescue operation.

“The hardest thing is that the longer it takes to find somebody, they longer they can be drifting,” Hernandez told the station.”

What happened and will the missing boat ever be found?

Written by Cynthia McKanzie – MessageToEagle.com Staff Writer