Scientists Claim To Have “Solved” Bermuda Triangle Mystery
For decades pilots and captains have been warned about the dangers that lurk in the Bermuda Triangle. Now scientists may have answered what makes the area so deadly. Also known…

CATANIA, ITALY – APRIL 20: Italian Minister Graziano Delrio stands on the deck of Italian Coast Guard ship Gregretti which is believed to be carrying 27 survivors of the migrant shipwreck in the mediterranean, at Catania port on April 20, 2015 in Catania, Italy. The weekend saw the worst disaster of its kind as hundreds of migrants are believed to have perished as they attempted to cross the mediterranean from Libya to Italy in order to seek refuge. (Photo by For decades pilots and captains have been warned about the dangers that lurk in the Bermuda Triangle
Tullio M. Puglia/Getty ImagesFor decades pilots and captains have been warned about the dangers that lurk in the Bermuda Triangle. Now scientists may have answered what makes the area so deadly. Also known as the Devil's Triangle, the region in the North Atlantic Ocean, which sits in a triangle between Miami, Bermuda and Puerto Rico, is said to have claimed many vessels under mysterious conditions. While legends have spoken about monsters or UFOs, scientists told Britain's Channel 5 that the likely reason is giant rogue waves formed when north and south storms meet with storms from Florida. Meanwhile the US Coast Guard denies that the area is dangerous saying it "does not recognize the existence of the so-called Bermuda Triangle as a geographic area of specific hazard to ships or planes."