List of Bermuda Triangle incidents

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This is a list of incidents attributed in popular culture to the Bermuda Triangle.

Aircraft incidents

Read the full list of all the Bermuda Triangle aircraft incidents: Bermuda Triangle Disappearances

Incidents at sea

  • 1800: USS Pickering, on course from Guadeloupe to Delaware, lost with 90 people on board.[7] {Possibly lost in a gale}
  • 1814: USS Wasp (1814), last known position was the Caribbean, lost with 140 people on board.[7] {Possibly lost in a storm}
  • 1824: USS Wild Cat (1822), on course from Cuba to Tompkins Island, lost with 14 people on board.[7] {Note lost in a Gale with 31 on board}
  • 1840: Rosalie, found abandoned except for a canary.[7] {Possibly the "Rossini" found derelict{?}[8]
  • 1918: USS Cyclops, collier, left Barbados on March 4, lost with all 306 crew and passengers en route to Baltimore, Maryland.[9]
  • 1921: January 31, Carroll A. Deering, five-masted schooner, Captain W. B. Wormell, found aground and abandoned at Diamond Shoals, near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.[10]
  • 1925: 1 December, SS Cotopaxi, having departed Charleston, South Carolina two days earlier bound for Havana, Cuba, radioed a distress call reporting that the ship was sinking. She was officially listed as overdue on 31 December.[11]
  • 1941: USS Proteus (AC-9), lost with all 58 persons on board in heavy seas, having departed St. Thomas in the Virgin Islands with a cargo of bauxite on 23 November. The following month, her sister ship USS Nereus (AC-10) was lost with all 61 persons on board, having also departed St. Thomas with a cargo of bauxite, on 10 December. According to research by Rear Admiral George van Deurs, USN, who was familiar with this type of ship from their service in the USN, the acidic coal cargo would seriously erode the longitudinal support beams, making these aging and poorly constructed colliers extremely vulnerable to breaking up in heavy seas.[12] They were both sister ships of the USS Cyclops.
  • 1963: SS Marine Sulphur Queen, lost with all 39 crewmen, having departed Beaumont, Texas, on 2 February with a cargo of 15,260 tons of sulphur. She was last heard from on 4 February, when she was in rough, nearly following seas of 16 feet, with northerly winds of 25-46 knots, and listed as missing two days later. The Coast Guard subsequently determined that the ship was unsafe and not seaworthy, and never should have sailed. The final report suggested four causes of the disaster, all due to poor design and maintenance of the ship.[13]
  • 2015: SS El Faro, sank off of the coast of the Bahamas within the triangle on September 20, 2015. The boat was missing for exactly one month until search crews identified the vessel 15,000 feet below the surface.

Incidents on land

References

  1. Flight 19 Department of the Navy, Naval Historical Center - The Loss Of Flight 19 Archived April 13, 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Aviation Safety net report
  3. G-AHNP Aviation Safety Network - Avro 688 Tudor 1 G-AHNP
  4. NC16002 Aviation Safety Network - Douglas DC-3DST-144 NC16002
  5. G-AGRE Avro 688 Tudor Mk.1 G-AGRE c/n 1253 - Jack McKillop
  6. [1]
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Berlitz, Charles, and J. Manson Valentine. Without a Trace. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1977. Print.
  8. [2]
  9. USS Cyclops Department of the Navy, Naval Historical Center - Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
  10. Ghost Ship of Diamond Shoals: The Mystery of the Carroll A. Deering
  11. "Mails and Shipping" The Times (London). Thursday, 31 December 1925. (44157), col D, p. 18.
  12. Canadian Merchant Ship Losses of the Second World War, 1939-1945
  13. Marine Sulphur Queen Coast Guard Report Summary of Findings
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links