

Throughout it all, he’s stuck to the same idea: the numbers don’t lie.Įven with some high-profile disappearances-such as Flight 19, a group of five U.S. Kruszelnicki has routinely garnered public attention for espousing these very thoughts on the Bermuda Triangle, first in 2017 and then again in 2022 before resurfacing once more in 2023. “Their experience suggests that the combined forces of nature and human fallibility outdo even the most incredulous science fiction.” Coast Guard contend that there are no supernatural explanations for disasters at sea,” NOAA says. NOAA says environmental considerations can explain away most of the Bermuda Triangle disappearances, highlighting the Gulf Stream’s tendency towards violent changes in weather, the number of islands in the Caribbean Sea offering a complicated navigation adventure, and evidence that suggests the Bermuda Triangle may cause a magnetic compass to point to true north instead of magnetic north, causing for confusion in wayfinding. In fact, as The Independent notes, Lloyd’s of London has had this same theory since the 1970s. He told The Independent that the sheer volume of traffic-in a tricky area to navigate, no less-shows “the number that go missing in the Bermuda Triangle is the same as anywhere in the world on a percentage basis.” He says that both Lloyd’s of London and the U.S.

“There is no evidence that mysterious disappearances occur with any greater frequency in the Bermuda Triangle than in any other large, well-traveled area of the ocean,” NOAA wrote in 2010.Īnd since 2017, Kruszelnicki has been saying the same thing. In fact, the loss and disappearance of ships and planes is a mere fact of probabilities. Both have been saying for years that there’s really no Bermuda Triangle mystery. Each one has a story without an ending, leading to a litany of conspiracy theories about the disappearances in the area, marked roughly by Florida, Bermuda, and the Greater Antilles.Īustralian scientist Karl Kruszelnicki, along with the United States’ own National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA), don’t subscribe to the Bermuda Triangle’s supernatural reputation.

PICK ANY ONE of the more than 50 ships or 20 planes that have disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle in the last century.
