Vanished without a trace: Inside the myths and mysteries of the Bermuda Triangle
- The Bermuda Triangle, a stretch of the Atlantic Ocean running between Puerto Rico, Bermuda, and Miami has been credited with the deaths and disappearances of over 8,000 lives since the mid-19th century.
- Though the exact number is not known, at least 50 ships and 20 airplanes have disappeared in the Triangle - often without a trace.
- The Bermuda Triangle has become the subject of endless legends, myths, and conspiracies. We're breaking down some of the biggest ones.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Some have called it The Devil's Triangle.
Others have referred to it as Limbo of the Lost or the Hoodoo Sea. But to most, it is the Bermuda Triangle, a stretch of water in the Atlantic Ocean known to swallow ships and vanish planes.
For centuries the Bermuda Triangle has been mystified as a harrowing patch of ocean, where sailors and pilots are prone to lose contact with the natural world and disappear forever.
Though the US government does not recognize the Bermuda Triangle as an actual geographic location or threat, its legends have long painted a picture of death, mystery, and fear.
We're breaking down the history of the Triangle and some of its most notorious tales:
Bermuda, and the long stretch of sea before it, has been turned to myth for centuries. Some even believe that William Shakespeare's play "The Tempest" is based on tales of sorcery and shipwreck in the area.
Source: History.com
When Christopher Columbus passed through the Bermuda Triangle on his first voyage to the new world, he recorded that a bursting flame of fire struck the sea and caused a strange light to appear in the distance a few weeks later.
Source: History.com, The New York Times
In 1881, legend has it that the Ellen Austin, a ship sailing from Liverpool to New York, encountered a "ghost ship" in the Bermuda Triangle — and things quickly went awry.
When the Ellen Austin approached the foggy waters of the Sargasso Sea — an area of the Atlantic Ocean that overlaps with the Bermuda Triangle — the crew encountered a fully stocked, abandoned ship.
Seeing this as an opportunity to seize valuable cargo, they sent some of their men in to occupy the ship and sail the remaining journey side by side. But a wicked storm quickly separated the two ships, and when they were reunited the next day, there wasn't a trace of the crew in sight.
The ship was once more abandoned but left packed with valuable resources, so the captain of the Ellen Austin tried boarding it again. But when crew members got aboard for the second time, a thick and blinding fog rolled in and separated the ships. When the fog finally cleared, the "ghost" ship had completely vanished, according to stories recounted in contemporary newspapers.
In 1895, Joshua Slocum, the first man to sail solo around the world, vanished on a voyage from Martha's Vineyard to South America.
Slocum should have never been lost at sea — he was known as a fantastic sailor — and his unexpected disappearance has since been attributed to Bermuda Triangle.
Source: History.com
In 1918, the US Navy's largest and fastest fuel ship, the USS Cyclops, disappeared en route from the Caribbean to Baltimore with 309 crew members and didn't leave a single trace of what had happened.
Though fully equipped with distress equipment and signals, the USS Cyclops gave no warning that something dangerous was happening at sea. The legendary ship, which once delivered aid during WWI and carried thousands of tons of manganese ore, had simply vanished without a trace.
Theories of mutiny, storms, poison, and torpedoes began to circulate, but none of it made much sense. If there was a wreck, where was the debris? Why was there no distress call? How could it have been captured when it lacked the fuel to travel very far?
Instead, people turned their minds to mysterious beasts, such as the giant squid, and the treacherous workings of the Bermuda Triangle, according to the Washington Post.
"There has been no more baffling mystery in the annals of the Navy than the disappearance last March of the U.S.S. Cyclops," Navy Secretary Josephus Daniels wrote in 1919.
In 1941, a Navy ship called the USS Proteus was carrying 58 passengers and a cargo of ore from St. Thomas to the East Coast when it suddenly vanished in the Bermuda Triangle. One month later, its sister ship, The USS Nereus, disappeared with 61 people along the same route.
Source: Live Science
In 1945, the legend of the Bermuda triangle began to take hold even more when five TBM Avenger torpedo bombers took off from a naval base in Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. and vanished in the Atlantic Ocean before completing their mission.
"Flight 19" was scheduled to complete a three-hour exercise which entailed heading east to conduct bombing runs, then flying over Grand Bahama Island, and eventually pivoting southwest to return home.
But along the way, the flight's leader Lieutenant Charles C. Taylor became paranoid when his compass failed and he believed that the planes were moving in the wrong direction. He instructed his fleet to fly northeast — thinking he was heading toward Florida, but really just traveling deeper into the Atlantic.
As the planes reached closer toward the Bermuda triangle, their signals began fading, according to the History channel. Eventually, all communication was cut and the planes were never seen again.
The last thing recorded in the communications by Flight 19 passengers were eerie reports on their location: "Everything looks strange, even the ocean," said one pilot.
And then he said: "It looks like we are entering white water...we're completely lost."
The disappearance of Flight 19 was so baffling that the official Navy report said it was "as if they had flown to Mars."
In 1948, a DC-3 commercial flight vanished over the Triangle with 29 passengers and two crew members headed toward Miami.
50 miles before reaching the city, the plane's captain, Robert Lindquist, radioed the Miami Airport for landing instructions.
But the radio was met with silence, and the plane was never seen again.
Source: ABC News
That same year, a British Avro Tudor plane dubbed "Star Tiger" vanished in the Bermuda Triangle without a trace.
Twenty-five passengers and six crew members were on board, and no wreckage or information was ever found.
According to BBC News, the official report concluded that "What happened in this case will never be known and the fate of Star Tiger must remain an unsolved mystery."
One year later, in 1949, a G-AGRE plane dubbed "Star Ariel" departed from Bermuda to Kingston, Jamaica. But the flight suddenly lost communications when it switched over to Kingston frequency above the Bermuda triangle. Though the weather was clear and the flight appeared to be on track, it was never seen or heard from again.
Source: Aviation Safety Network
In 1963, the SS Marine Sulphur Queen, a large tanker ship carrying 39 passengers and molten sulfur, was last seen near the southern coast of Florida. After more than two weeks of looking, the rescue team only found a few pieces of debris and life preservers.
Source: ABC News
The phrase "Bermuda triangle" was officially coined by Vincent Gaddis in a 1964 pulp magazine article titled "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle."
In his story, Gaddis outlined several mysteries of the Triangle, heightening the theory that this stretch of ocean is a treacherous zone.
Source: The New York Times, History.com
In 1967, the people on the 590-foot cargo ship Sylvia L. Ossa became victims of the Triangle's mysteries when the ship suddenly disappeared with 37 people on board. Though debris including life preserver and a lifeboat was found, the ship itself was never again detected.
Sources: ABC News, The New York Times
In 1978, an experienced pilot named Irving Rivers departed from the US Virgin Islands on a solo flight to pick up passengers in St. Thomas. The weather was calm and Rivers was just one mile from landing when his signal lights suddenly disappeared from the radar. A search team was sent to look for him, but the plane was never found.
Source: How Stuff Works
In 1984, a Cessna plane departing from Fort Lauderdale, and en route to an island in the Bahamas, completely vanished from radar signals before dropping down into the ocean. There were no radio signals issued, and though one woman claimed to have seen the plane plunge into the water, no wreckage was ever found.
Source: How Stuff Works
Theories about the Bermuda Triangle have been rampant for decades. Some suggest the Triangle's mysteries are a result of alien activity. Others believe it's the powerful workings of the mythical underwater city Atlantis.
Source: History.com
But Bermuda Triangle stories have been proven to be more fiction than fact. The US government has never recognized this area of ocean as an actual, threatening location, and there is no evidence to suggest that disappearances occur with any more frequency in the Triangle than in other large stretches of ocean.
Scientists have attributed these many disappearances to rapid and severe weather changes, shallow waters, and methane gas eruptions in the seafloor.
Sources: Business Insider, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
On January 31, 2020, the wreckage of the SS Cotopaxi was found off the coast of Florida.
Many had believed that the ship initially disappeared in 1925 because of mysterious reasons related to the Bermuda Triangle. Its discovery finally put those theories to rest.