The Bermuda Triangle Does Exist
In the Atlantic Ocean, between the Bermuda Islands, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. city of Miami, the Bermuda Triangle is a geographical area of over one million square kilometers famous worldwide for the inexplicable disappearance of ships and planes. So far, since the mid-19th century, it is believed that about 50 planes and 20 ships have disappeared in this area of the Atlantic Ocean. The legend of the Bermuda Triangle was born in the mid-20th century with Edward Van Winkle Jones, a journalist from the Associated Press who named this area the Devil's Triangle. Although it is true that his reports were not very rigorous and somewhat sensationalistic, the fact is that there are disappearances that remain unexplained and not understood.
But these enigmas have just been solved. It was the oceanographer Simon Boxall from the University of Southampton, in the documentary The Bermuda Triangle Enigma, broadcast by the British channel Channel 5, who revealed that the disappearance of these vessels is due to nothing more than giant waves that can exceed 30 meters in height.
These waves would be 'rogue waves' that form and disappear quickly - they last only a few minutes - as an effect of storms and the collision of several smaller waves at the same point. These waves, combined with strong currents and the depth of the waters, would be the explanation for the sinking and absence of debris from the ships.
Regarding aircraft accidents, the so-called Bermuda Triangle is a place where strange hexagonal cloud formations occur, which are real 'air bombs'. This finding was revealed by a team of meteorologists from the University of Colorado in California, who examined the sky using NASA's climate satellites. These clouds measure between 32 and 88 kilometers wide and are capable of unleashing winds of over 270 kilometers per hour, currents so strong that they can plunge planes into the sea.
All these studies reveal that yes, the Bermuda Triangle exists, but it has little to do with the paranormal; it is Nature in its purest form.