SS Marine Sulphur Queen Essays

  • The Bermuda Triangle

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    bermuda-triangle.org/html/columbus.html 7. Bhattacharya, Raj. (n.d.). Tudor Star Tiger. Disappearance In The Bermuda Triangle. Retrieved 29 March, 2014, from http://www.bermuda-attractions.com/bermuda2_00009e.htm 8. Bhattacharya, Raj. (n.d.). Marine Sulphur Queen. Lost In The Bermuda Triangle. Retrieved 29 March, 2014, from http://www.bermuda-attractions.com/bermuda2_000066.htm

  • Bermuda Triangle

    1454 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Bermuda Triangle Is the Bermuda Triangle really a place where strange powers are at work? The Bermuda Triangle is a very complex and mystifying area that is noted for a high incidence of unexplained losses of ships, small boats, and aircraft. From reading this paper one will learn geographic features of the Bermuda Triangle, famous disappearances, and possible explanations for them. There is a section of the western Atlantic, off the southeast coast of the United States, forming what has been

  • Cause Of The Bermuda Triangle

    1143 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Bermuda Triangle is the home of approximately just under a thousand “unexplained” disappearances in the past five hundred years. This area has generated unproven tales that have served as “explanations” for these disappearances. The triangle is also known for its unique weather and other “unnatural” occurrences. However, each story or occurrence within the Bermuda Triangle can be explained. Weather in the Bermuda Triangle is more unique than any other area in the world. There is a very present

  • The Bermuda Triangle

    918 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Bermuda Triangle The Bermuda Triangle is a triangular area in the Atlantic Ocean bounded by Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico. Many people believed that people, ships, and planes have mysteriously vanished in this area. The size of the triangle varies from 500,000 square miles. Some trace the mystery back to the time of Columbus. Bermuda Triangle estimates range from about 200 to no more than 8,000 distress calls in the area and that there have been more than 50 ships and 20 planes to go

  • The Urmuda Triangle: An Overview Of The Bermuda Triangle

    809 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Bermuda Triangle (the Devil’s Triangle), is a stretch of the Atlantic Ocean bordered by a line from Florida, to the islands of Bermuda, to Puerto Rico and then back to Florida. It is well known for all the mysterious things that happen within it. It got its name from a news article written by VIncent H. Gaddis in 1964. He claimed that in that part of the Atlantic ocean, a large amount of ships and planes have went missing without any explanation. He wasn’t the first to claim something about that

  • Bermuda Triangle Conspiracy

    655 Words  | 2 Pages

    Navy Avenger torpedo-bombers was having compass failures and back up one to by the afternoon around 6:20pm the last time the crew was heard at the radio who was telling his crew to ditch the aircrafts. Due to low fuel , since then they send 13 Marine Rescue Crew out to the sea to search the Sea’s at 7:20 a tank reported an explosion that was in the directions of the Bermuda since then nothing was ever heard or seen again. The disappearance of 13 men were stranded in the mysterious triangle. This

  • Bermuda Triangle

    1391 Words  | 3 Pages

    working. Planes t... ... middle of paper ... ...pearances occurred. Each was a world away from the other. One was off Australia, the other off Puerto Rico in the Bermuda Triangle, yet both were very similar. Both pilots were sober, one was a US Marine. Both reported a strange object harassing or, at the very least, very interested in their aircraft. Both could not describe exactly what it was. But in both cases, when it came in closer, it apparently caused a disruption of radio communication and

  • The Bermuda Triangle Phenomenon

    3128 Words  | 7 Pages

    Press dispatch Reporter E.V. W. Jones wrote of "mysterious disappearances" of ships and planes between the Florida coast and Bermuda. Two years after this article appeared Fate magazine ran an article by George X. Sand about a "series of strange marine disappearances, each leaving no trace whatever, that have taken place in the past few years" in a "watery triangle bounded roughly by Florida, Bermuda and Puerto Rico". It was not long before ideas and suggestions started forming about this piece