Bermuda Triangle
u2901837@unimilitar.edu.coALEJANDRO QUINTERO CASTRO
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“The region involved, a waterytriangle bounded roughly by Florida, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico, measures less than a
thousand miles on any one side.”
. . .So George X. Sand introduced the Triangle tohis readers in October 1952 in a short article for Fate magazine,
entitled “Sea Mystery at our Back Door.”
Sand’s article recounted the latest disappearance (the Sandra in 1950)and went on to discuss some of the other recent baffling
mysteries like the disappearance of airliners NC16002, Star Tiger and Star Ariel . The rest of the article wasessentially devoted to
Flight 19.
The Triangle remained a colloquial expression throughout the 1950s, employed by locals when another disappearance or
unexplained crash happened.By the early 1960s, it had acquired the name The Deadly Triangle. In his 1962 book, Wings of Mystery, author Dale Titler also
devoted pages in Chapter 14— “The Mysteryof Flight 19”— to recounting the most recent incidents of disappearances and even
began to ponder theories, such as electromagnetic anomalies. His book would set the tempo for Trianglediscussions thereafter largely
because of a sensational bit in the April 1962 edition of American Legion magazine by Allan W. Eckert. The article was devoted to
Flight 19 (“TheMystery of the Lost Patrol”) and Eckert introduced some of the most popular but erroneous dialogue purported coming
from Flight 19, including lines like the ocean looks strange, all the...
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