For a history-related video from LEMMiNO, I would recommend: "The Lost Colony of Roanoke" For some personal favourites of mine from him, I'd say: "The Search for D.B. Cooper" "The Universal S"
@@maggielovestoads archeologists have been digging up the nearby Native American island and have found European artifacts in the same layers/side by side with Native artifacts. There's also an account about 100 years after the colony went missing about blue eyed Natives living there and claiming their ancestors read from books. At this point, archeologists are taking the stance that the lost colony just integrated with the nearby Native tribes. There's a few news articles on it if you'd like to look it up.
As someone who has lived in Bermuda since age 6 (15 years), I can confidently tell you that the Bermuda Triangle is just a mystery for the sake of mystery. I have personally flown easily 100 times in my life and have never had any issue. Sure there are ship wreaks and plane crashes, but the majority of these can be attributed to the wealth of reefs in the area, the consistent storms and hurricanes in the region, the fact that this is one of the most traveled areas of the ocean, and the isolation and extremely small size of the island. If one were blown off course or didn't have the best navigation materials it is easy to understand how they would not be able to locate the island. Also these 'mysterious' occurrences all happened years ago when the vessels lacked adequate navigation technology.
Thank you! Yes, there are scientifically documented anomalies in the triangle that are still not 100% peer agreed with, and those peers expertise will usually side with their own theories in an unintentional bias. I have passed through only a few times, and it was uneventful, even when we had weather changes we weren't expecting. We can all agree it's a weird space, but only because a million theories contradict the other when it should just be, 'Shit happens'.
@@ShayTheValiant It's not just 100 times, it's actually 2,000 times for people living in developed countries. It is just safer, especially if you calculate by death rate per distance traveled.
@@mordecaif I just think a plane crash would do more damage than a car crash but I don’t know like you said they both kill Meaning like I guess more painful? Idk
Some researchers claimed that there is a mirror to the Bermuda Triangle in the southern hemisphere that they called the "Brazilian Triangle". Later, however, after further investigation, it was determined that Brazilian Triangle was simply a menu item at hair waxing parlors.
This entire triangle thing seems like the "you're most likely to have a car crash nearby where you live." Yes...because I drive a lot near where I live... Love the "we need a bigger triangle" quip.
Awesome video and excited for you to do more Lemmino reactions. I definitely think you should check out D B Cooper next! That’s a wildly interesting case!!!
This was great. My American take is the creator did excellent research, the region can have rough weather, but it's mainly a fun ghost story to tell the kids. So the legend lives on...
You need to check out the mystery of the disappearance of Roanoke, Virginia where an entire colony of settlers just vanished, it's really interesting and creepy
The U.S. Great Lakes, i.e., Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie and Superior, have lost many ships. One of the most known in modern times was the Edmund Fitzgerald. Gordon Lightfoot sings about it in “the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald”.
There are sunken ships still being discovered in all of the Great Lakes. Also one missing flight still never found: Flight 2501 that disappeared over Lake Michigan
To believe there is a triangle... you have to really "want to." And I will say, if anyone REALLY believes it then you should call one of your former therapists, of which I'm sure there are several, and make a new appointment, you NEED it.
Hi man, just binged some of your videos today, really enjoyed them, especially the ones on history and geography👍. I'd suggest a reaction to rallying/rallycross racing, guys are mad.
Lol I was obsessed with it as a kid and researched it extensively out of fear lol. Crazy how much you used to think the triangle and quick sand would affect you haha
I went on vacation to Bermuda several years ago. Flew from Chicago to Baltimore then drove D.C. flew to New York to Bermuda and back. No problems. Bermuda is beautiful and definitely not part of the Caribbean. Way farther north. Great beaches and SCUBA diving. Spent a lot of time in the air and in/under the water. The "scariest" thing I saw was a big moray eel. He was actually quite handsome and a privilege to meet.
People orchestrated this “mystery.” There are hundreds of ships, including cruise ships, that cross the Bermuda Triangle without incident. There have also been no recent incidents of sailing vessels or airplanes disappearing.
You'll notice the triangle became a lot less mysterious after the advent of radar. That, and it's a lot easier to tabulate losses that are close to civilization, where shipping routes and flight paths converge. It's just plain difficult to have a lot of mysterious happenings out in the greater ocean since that same traffic is spread out to several orders of magnitude lower distribution. In other words, everyone bunches up near ports, and everyone is spread far apart out at sea.
Ah the Bermuda Triangle, it's fun to speculate on what mysterious forces are at work here making things disappear, but remember for every ship or plane that goes missing there are literally thousands of ships and planes that didn't go missing and made their way through this piece of water without incident.
"it is not selective on what, when, or how it strikes", if that's the case then events attributed to violent areas or even supernatural phenomena of the bermuda triangle would essentially be indistinguishable from pure randomness/probability/daily phenomena. Which means that the bermuda triangle seems to be exactly the same as any other part of the ocean, meaning the only thing special about the triangle is it's reputation despite the fact that it is not physically a special area lol.
I personally think there is a magnetic anomaly in that area. There have been many stories of instrument interference, compass malfunction, etc. Nature is weird...ya never know. 🤷♀️
many scientist tested it for anomalies, and no one found anything strange tbh. Its that movies and tv series and various conspiracy theories made it a legend and myth, but if we take almost any other random (traffic heavy)ocean/sea place, numbers are similar or even higher. People dont get how vast oceans are and how deep they are, if something dissapears, it can sink from few kilometers down to 10+ km down and till someone dives to those places for science, parts of ship pr plane will be so eroded that it will be not recognizable, not to even mention human bodies that detioriate and are eaten by animals in days.
I always heard two reasons for it. 1. There are plateaus or shelves that lie just below the surface making them nearly impossible to see, especially in calm waters, so boats hit them and sink. It's pretty common in the Bahamas and other areas with a lot of tiny islands. 2. At the bottom of the triangle are vents or faults or whatever that can release gases sometimes, so every so often they can release a huge bubble that rises to the surface and can possible capsize a smaller, ill-placed vessel. I obvs don't know for sure and have no proof, but sometimes a mystery for mystery's sake is fun 🤷
5:23 That depiction makes it hit me, just how amazing it was that some dudes were able to cross that huge ocean in a boat made of lumber and some sails. Relying on the wind as momentum.. Crazy to think about. You'd have to be very brave, stupid, and/or just don't value your own life.
One of the strangest stories connected to the Bermuda Triangle I've ever read, or heard is about an airplane that disappeared, then reappeared. I forget the name of the pilot and the model of airplane he was flying. But the story goes something like this: Man takes off in small single or twin engine plane and is flying through the triangle on a short flight. The sky is clear with some scattered clouds Part way along the route the plane flies into a cloud and disappears from radar at an altitude of ~10,000 feet. No radio calls to indicate anything is wrong, no maydays, nothing. Just. . . "poof." Plane vanishes without a trace. About 1 hour and 45 minutes later the plane reappears on radar in the same exact position and altitude that it disappeared from continuing on its previous course as if nothing had happened. He is ordered to return to the field he had left from. He lands at without further incident, the pilot clueless he had been missing for that long, and his watch and onboard chronometer showing one hour fourty-five minutes slow. The same amount of time the plane had been missing. His story is that he flew through the cloud and out of it and felt nothing. He was over open water and couldn't have landed as part of some elaborate hoax. I wish I could remember the book of collected BT stories I read it in, but being that was 25+ years ago, from a book that was older than me, I just can't. I just wanted to share that one story I can recall. Wish I could remember the name of the source to confirm, but memory is funny that way.
Hey luka 4.7k views in less than 24 hours if those numbers don't speak for theirselves... your fucking making it big man love to see it 🤧 oh lord almost cried
I think disappearances can occur anywhere in the ocean, somehow though the bermuda triangle is a place where it occurs the most maybe, it's crazy how in the 21th century commercial planes and also ships can just vanish like if they were abducted, then to find no wreckage whatsoever
Lots of people have a fear of flying. Take comfort in the fact that tens if not hundreds of thousands of flights happen daily, and they depart and arrive safely. There are also reports of some strange weather phenomenon, aircraft disappearing for hours and should have crashed, only to suddenly appear with nearly full tanks of fuel. The Triangle is indeed a mysterious place.
Edit: The video does a good job of debunking the myths. Fight 19 is not a mystery. Multiple ground stations overheard the other pilots - who were trainees - arguing with the flight commander that they were over the Atlantic and needed to fly west to return to Florida. The flight commander had decided they were somehow over the Gulf of Mexico or the FL Keys (they weren't) and ordered them to continue flying north or east. The "boss is (NOT) always right". The flying boat which was sent to search for them was notorious for catching fire and/or exploding in flight due to leaky fuel tanks. Little airplanes, ships, and submarines - big ocean.
I've heard that the reason ships and planes go missing is because some kind of sediment that sits at the bottom of the triangle have such powerful magnetic fields that they interfered with older navigation equipment that mainly relied on magnets.
Theres some old low budget films made for Tv. One of my favorites is called the Triangle, its hard to read more about online but its about a group of tourist who entered the bermuda triangle and discovered the missing ship Queen of Scotts a 4 funnel passenger ship that disappeared 50 yrs prior to the films setting, but the curiosity turn to horror as one by one the tourist dies. Its a fun thriller.
D.B.Cooper, has to be Christensen. Former N.W.Airline workers I know believe this. Source: BF and our close friends all worked for NWA for 20+ years. (Mechanics, pilots, FAs, etc)
If you enjoyed this, take a look at the channel Bob Gymlan. He does cryptid stuff, like bigfoot, and other wild beasts. Amazing storyteller, and very critical, but hopeful.
When I was a kid, I remember someone talking about how there was an excess of natural gases in that particular part of the ocean and that supposedly can cause equipment malfunctions. Maybe there was something with that?
I think you should react to Defuntland since your diversifying your content it’s about Roller Coasters and amusement parks in case your interested in their content
Ahh. I remember my first panic attack so well. My family and I were moving to New York from Puerto Rico. The day before the flight I was so excited to board a plane and just to live in the US, so I went down a rabbit hole on RU-vid that ended in the Bermuda triangle mystery. I was very worried, so I told my mom about it, and she said that the plane just avoids that area and that we'd be fine. Well, plane takes off, I'm already pretty scared because of the feeling of falling and going up that you get from takeoff, and then ~30 minutes in I look at the map and realize that we're not diverting but flying right through it! It was silent panic, but even 7 years later, at 20 years old, I still can't fly without having an internal sense of doom. And that, my friends, is how irrational fears develop. I still can fly though. I would just rather not.
The scary thing is that research into areas with similar disappearances has actually revealed multiple triangles across the globe. Not all of them are in the oceans either. There is an area of the Sahara desert that supports zero life and causes any animals that enter it to act very strange and disoriented, causing even the most gentle animals to lash out and attack. Scary stuff, especially because we have no idea why.
I’ve flown plenty of times and it’s nothing to be scared about! Though I suggest no sitting at the tail end since there’s a chance of turbulence and the end shakes really hard. You’ll be fine with airlines with good service of course
The shipping lanes and deep sea fishing is done right there all the time. I've never had any instrumental abnormalities. (With the exception of ball lightning which is very common out there and will fry your instrument panel. There are places with in Florida, the state proper, that have that same abnormality.) The only thing that's ever concerned me out there is pirates.
Dont be afraid of flying man, I’m an aviation student right now trying to become a commercial airlines pilot in a few years. I’ve flown many times as a passenger and it’s actually a lot safer than being in a car.
There are about 75,000 flights every day, there would be flights passing the Bermuda Triangle in the tens or 100s or maybe even thousands. The odds of accidents would be very slim, these videos you watch are famous because of many different ways, one of which being how rare it is for accidents like those can happen. I've flown about 20 flights, and I get scared of Air turbulence like a little kid, but I don't think an accident will ever occur even if I fly above Bermuda Triangle.
Luka most flights in and out of Caribbean are safe. Bermuda is a special case, as it is 500 miles north of the rest of the Caribbean & 500 mi from both FLORIDA and North Carolina. I would only fly to & from Bermuda through North Carolina because the wacky weather is constant on the entire route. It's a direct east-west route so least likely to cause pilots confusion. Flying is fun & Bermuda's probably a must see destination. Don't let illogical fears of flying paralyze you as life is much too short anyways & you miss out. Just use the NORTH CAROLINA route to fly in & out of Bermuda.
I’m not gonna lie, I would never fly in one of those small planes or helicopters. They don’t have many engines and it takes a small disfunction for them to crash. I feel perfectly safe in bigger planes though or really any plane except for like the 4 seaters 😂.
Hopefully you can find additional information that doesn’t attempt to dismiss the strange and unexplainable mysteries of the triangle so easily. This is not the only triangle in the world. There are at least three or more. Keep researching.❤️