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A crew of five U.S. Navy planes flying over the area disappeared
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That same year, a sixth aircraft disappeared, a Martin Mariner emergency plane that came to the rescue of the first five. In other words, a total of 27 people disappeared without a trace
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It was made by journalist Edward Van Winkle Jones, who wrote in the Miami Herald about the strange disappearance of a large number of boats off the coast of the Bahamas.
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A few decades ago, as this theme began to circulate everywhere, writers like George X. Sand, claimed that there were mysterious marine disappearances in the area.
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It is estimated that between 1800 and that same year, ten ships in total sank or disappeared.
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The latest news is that the SS Marine Sulphur Queen, a converted T2 tanker carrying material with a crew of thirty-nine, disappeared off the southern coast of Florida.
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The magazine published a complete article entitled "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle" in which it spoke of strange disappearances, paranormal phenomena and mysteries that made whoever sailed those waters automatically disappear.
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An extraordinary work that attributed the losses of ships and planes to extraterrestrials and survivors of the lost city of Atlantis, which sold 20 million copies in more than 30 languages.
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Today people have multiple theories to explain the events that occurred, such as the existence of a black hole, a possible lost continent that they call Atlantis, or they are also involving otherworldly beings as aliens.
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On the other hand, scientists and journalists now believe that there is no mystery about the strange disappearances at the site, and that the events are simply due to human error, the weather, or any other factor that might occur on any unprepared vessel or trip. So in the eyes of science, to this day, the Bermuda Triangle is as harmless a place as any in the world.