This Scientist May Have Solved The Mystery Of The Bermuda Triangle!

This Scientist May Have Solved The Mystery Of The Bermuda Triangle!
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This Scientist May Have Solved The Mystery Of The Bermuda Triangle!
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Has one of our planet’s oldest mysteries finally been solved?

Dr. Karl Kruszelnicki is convinced: he’s solved the age-old mystery of the Bermuda triangle. And the answer is…there is no mystery!

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No mystery at all—only novel-worthy exaggerations all stemming from one particular event: the 1945 disappearance of a military aircraft that was surveilling the zone. “It didn’t vanish without a trace” explains the scientist, hugely popular in his home country of Australia, in an interview with Australian media outlet news.com.au last July 21st.

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“According to Lloyds of London and the US coast guard, the number of planes that go missing in the Bermuda Triangle is the same as anywhere in the world on a percentage basis,” he continues.

According to him, the military engine that vanished in 1945 was simply the victim of bad weather or a piloting accident. Same for the other five that disappeared the same year, apparently due to a lack of fuel thanks to a miscalculation by the squadron’s leader, lieutenant Charles Taylor.

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“Taylor arrived with a hangover, flew off without a watch, and had a history of getting lost and ditching his plane twice before,” Kruszelnicki describes.

The rest of the mystery is attributed to the author Charles Berlitz, a paranormal phenomena enthusiast whose most famous book, The Bermuda Triangle—which has sold over 20 million copies since its publication in 1974—introduced the world to the legend of this notorious region.

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But the book was also criticised for its “partial presentation of facts, as well as a lack of scientific source material,” as its Wikipedia page states.

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