When one examines the facts, the truth about the subject becomes apparent and the "mystery" collapses. The Phenomena Department calls the Bermuda Triangle a "manufactured mystery," one created by lazy and sensationalist writers. To top it off, Lloyd's of London stated that as of 1975 there were 428 missing vessels reported since 1955, and that there was no evidence to support claims that the "Bermuda Triangle" had more vanishings than anywhere else. By engaging in true research, and not just rewriting a previous author's stories, Kusche proved that many of the "strange marine disappearances" weren't so strange after all. In 1975, the myth was brought to a end with the publication of Larry Kusche's The Bermuda Triangle Mystery - Solved. The peak of popularity for the myth was in 1974, when Charles Berlitz (a name greatly despised by the Phenomena Department) wrote The Bermuda Triangle, which went on to sell five million copies world wide. The myth grew quickly through the 1950s and into the 1960s, with new books and articles crediting the vanishing to malign alien intelligences and/or an advanced underwater civilization. Sand wrote an article in Fate magazine which described "strange marine disappearances" in a "watery triangle bounded roughly by Florida, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico." Jones discussed a number of mysterious disappearances of ships and planes between the Florida coast and the island of Bermuda. The origins of the Bermuda Triangle myth can be traced to an Associated Press dispatch of September 16, 1950. The Bermuda Triangle, the Devil's Sea and Vile Vortices A brief overview of these events is as follows: William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act 1 scene 5Īside from preternatural beings, the Phenomena Department also investigates and documents all kinds of paranormal phenomena. OTHER PARANORMAL EVENTS There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,