Seeking funding for Bermuda Triangle?
This is a call out to all television networks, the US Navy and the US coastguard and other civilians affected by the Bermuda Triangle. Please email or mail information of missing persons, ships, boats or planes to the below address.
I am going to begin investigations on the Bermuda Triangle and am seeking massive amounts of funding.
This project will continue and be recorded on a specific website to be built and maintained in the near future.
The amount of funding will reach 1.5 million US dollars.
When this amount is raised I (with a small crew) will commence investigations.
Send donations to:
The Bermuda Triangle
c/o James Adams
145 Manth Ave
Pt St John, Fl 32927

September 10th, 2009 at 12:16 pm
One of the few Bermuda Triangle Facts that can be confirmed is the Bermuda Triangle location. In fact, the location of the Bermuda Triangle is somewhat arbitrary as well. There are no official boundaries. However, the triangle is generally assumed to run from Bermuda to Puerto Rico to Miami and back to Bermuda.
A fact that is unexplained about the Bermuda Triangle is that electro-magnetic compasses that normally point to the magnetic north pole, point to the true north pole when used inside the area of the Bermuda Triangle. This phenomena happens in only one place other than the Bermuda Triangle – the Devil’s Sea off the east coast of Asia.
The term Bermuda Triangle was in fact first used in an Argosy Magazine article written by Vincent H. Gaddis in 1964. Since that time, a number of “nicknames” have immerged for the Bermuda Triangle – Limbo of the Lost, Hoodoo Sea, and even Devil’s Triangle – some coined in literature.
One fact is undeniable about the Bermuda Triangle. There have been a number of strange and sometimes unexplained disappearances in the Triangle. The tale of Flight 19 – a group of five Navy torpedo bombers and one search plane disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle area (perhaps!) – is the most notorious of these.
However, there have been strange occurrences observed in the area of the Bermuda Triangle as well. Even as far back as the 1492 crossing of the Atlantic by Christopher Columbus, these have been recorded. Columbus documented in his logs of strange occurrences with his compass in the area that we now consider the Bermuda Triangle.
Another fact about the Bermuda Triangle that is undeniable is that the area has claimed over 1,000 lives in the past 100 years. Some of these are a result of “human error” in navigating the area. However there are always suspicious or unexplained disappearances happening in the Bermuda Triangle.
There is a vast array of lore surrounding the existence of the Bermuda Triangle. Some of this stems from the idea that with-in the Bermuda Triangle lies the lost city of Atlantis in the depths of the Atlantic Ocean. Off the coast of Bimini, there is a set of underwater steps believed to be part of that civilization. Little exploration can be done because the Bermuda Triangle includes some of the deepest trenches in the Atlantic Ocean – much too deep to explore.
Today, thousands of passages are made through the Bermuda Triangle every year. Virtually every Caribbean cruise originating from the east coast of North America passes through part of the Bermuda Triangle. Modern planes fly to the Caribbean hotspots and from southern United States to Europe through the Bermuda Triangle. Perhaps the next time you travel through the Bermuda Triangle by air or sea you will think of the lost civilization of Atlantis and her mighty power?
LIST OF MISSING AIRCRAFTS
1942
TBF Avenger: after leaving Cheery Point, NC on patrol.
PBY Catalina
1943
TBF Avenger
Lockheed PV-1 Ventura
Lockheed PV-1 Ventura
PB4Y Privateer
PV-1 Ventura
PV-1 Ventura
1944
PBY Catalina
PB4Y Privateer
SBD-5 Dauntless
PBY-5A Catalina
1945
PBM Martin Mariner
Privateer
2 KC-135 Strato-Tankers
B-24 Liberator
Flight 19
1947
C-54
1948
Star Tiger
Into the Blue: The DC-3
NC16002 and N407D
1949
Star Ariel
1950
Grumman F6F-5 Hellcat
Grumman F9F-2 Panther
1952 (Curtis C-46)
1953 (TV-2 Texan)
1954 (Flight 441)
1956 (Martin Marlin)
1960-1961(“Pogo 22” A SAC B-52)
1962 (Tyler 41 A KB-50 tanker)
(2 C-133 Cargomasters)
1963-1965 (C-119 “Flying Boxcar”)
LSOT SHIPS
1815
General Gates, Hornet, Insurgent, Pickering, Wasp, Wildcat, Expervier
1840- ( Rosalie)
1881- ( Ellen Austin)
1918- (Cyclops with 309 men aboard)
1925-1926 ( Cotopaxe, Suduffoc)
1938- (Anglo Australian)
1955- ( Home Sweet Home)
1960,1961,1962- ( Ethelc, Callista III, Evangeline)
1995,1996- (Jamanick, Intrepid)
2000- (Tropic Bird)