The Cyclops most likely went down in a storm off the mouth of Chesapeake Bay about the time the Cyclops was due although there is some speculation that she might have sunk in the Puerto Rico Trench, certainly not an impossibility. In the late 1960s a Navy diver thought he'd found her, based on a later photo he saw of the Cyclops, but when he went back a few years later he couldn't relocate her, raising the possibility that the Cyclops has slid into deeper water. Alternatively, the ship that the diver saw may have been either of the Cyclops's sister ships, the Nereus or the Proteus, both of which vanished without a trace.
@@rogerrendzak8055The comment was all "most likely" and "might have" assertions. I guess we could say it's a fact the diver wasn't sure he'd seen it ;)
The El Faro cargo ship and its crew sank after sailing into Hurricane Joaquin. There never was a mystery about that ship. It was the victim of bad maintenance, a greedy overbearing company that pushed the Captain to go out when they knew the storm was brewing. For the Captain to refuse to sail or even delay the sailing would have cost him his job. As a result, it cost him and his crew their lives and the ship was lost. It was found later on.
It was as much the captains fault as the company. He was using out of date weather data and refused to listen to the officers under him who were actually up to date on the weather. He spent the majority of a crucial day in his cabin. A good captain doesn't leave the bridge in dangerous conditions. He failed his crew and they died.
I once heard that it's a high concentration of electro magnetics. I don't know how true it is but that's what someone suggested on a documentary I saw.
There were 5 planes found on the bottom of the sea in the area of the Bermuda Triangle in 1991 by Graham Hawkes who thought this might be Flight 19, but no such luck-the one readable set of serial numbers did not match. Thus it is felt that it's just a random collection of planes that went down. Gian Quasar, author of "They Flew Into Oblivion", posits that they may have gone down in the Okeefenokee Swamp. If that is indeed where they went down, given the remoteness of the Okeefenokee even today, it is not surprising that they haven't been found.
Alien's👾👽, - urban legend??? Didn't know outer space, was urban. Don't tell the extraterrestrials that, or they may cop a complex😏………… And, it's Edgar 'Casey', fella🤨. Also, I liked it when you closed out the documentary, with the movie; 'The Final Countdown' (1980)!!
No methane venting has ever been observed to boil the sea in any areas by ships or planes ? Debunkers go to extreme means to deny the unexplainable facts . Rouge waves would leave pieces of ships and boats all over the surface but never has been found of any missing ships ?
No such thing as the southern ocean, it’s just where the Atlantic , pacific and Indian Oceans meet Antarctica. It can’t be an ocean with an entire continent within it, not an island.
The ocean is a big place to get lost in especially when we don't have a clue where to start for all we know them planes are in the water 5p miles off the coast of road island
Flight 19 left no traces at where they could have disappeared This is so because Flight 19 was sent into the far future In 1943 the Philadelphia experiment proved conclusively that a very strong electromagnetic field will send ships and submarines and people and planes into the future The Navy doesn't want us to know but the experiment was done twice once without a crew and once with a crew Both times the ship was sent to the future Once the electromagnetic field was switched off the ship returned to Philadelphia and the present Now most planes and ships reported malfunctioning compasses which points directly to the presence of a strong Electromagnetic field around It follows that these planes , ships and submarines were all sent into the future providing they reported Compass failures before they disappeared All these planes , ships and submarines and people will all turn up sometime in the future No wonder no traces have been found
Ok this was a mediocre at best video. You made some obvious mistakes. The El Faro is the worst example presented because of how well known it was and how detailed to the information they had up until its eventual demise. You could not blame this accident on the Bermuda Triangle or some other worldly circumstances. And when was is it ever known as the Devil's Triangle? I thought that was out west over Nevada or New Mexico. Nice try hopefully you'll get better.
It has been known under a number of names, such as the Devil's Triangle, the Hoodoo Sea and of course, the Bermuda Triangle. A film of that name was released in 1971, based on the Richard Winer book, The Devil's Triangle", which is about the Bermuda Triangle. And the last time I checked, that area in Nevada was called the Nevada Triangle.
Totally, untrue. It IS been referred to as, The Devil's Triangle. What, ya didn't see the movie🤔?? And, it's not out west, either (that's a, good one😆). You learn that, off of Facebook🤭??
these documentaries are all flash, no thunder. also the robot narrator needs to visit a pronunciation guide. i hope this channel stops appearing in my feed.