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The new theory explains the mystery of the Bermuda triangle using ship waves experiences

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A scientist from the University of Southampton claims to have resolved the mystery of the Bermuda triangle.

Located between Florida, Bermuda and Puerto Rico, this precarious seasop is known for its changing weather conditions, variable sea levels and complex navigation realities.

The disappearances in the ship and the plane of the region sparked urban legends, which earned it the disturbing nickname of the devil’s triangle.

The schoolboy identifies the American revolution of the warship on the beach after the storm discovers a wreck of 230 years

The oceanographer Simon Boxall told Daily Mail that disappearances are due to “rough waters”.

“There are storms in the south and north, which meet,” he said in a British documentary, “The Bermuda Triangle Enigma” by Channel 5, which is not available outside the United Kingdom

The university researcher claims to resolve the mystery of the Bermuda Traingel

An oceanographer from the University of Southampton claims to have resolved the mystery of the Bermuda triangle, attributing disappearances to rough waters and thug waves. (istock)

Boxall, with other researchers, has rebuilt a model on the scale of one of the ships that has disappeared in the Bermuda triangle.

During the First World War, the USS Cyclops supported war ships in European waters as a unit of the naval auxiliary force, according to the National Museum of the American Navy (NMUSN).

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The ship disappeared in March 1918 on its return from Brazil.

“Many ships have sailed to locate the necklace because it would have been sunk by a German submarine,” said the Nmusn website. “Its wreck has never been found, and the cause of its loss remains unknown.”

Global Triangle Bermuda ship

Boxall, as well as other researchers, have rebuilt a model on the scale of the USS Cyclops (photo) which has disappeared in the Bermuda triangle. (US Navy National Museum)

Boxall tested the replica to see how she would get out with red waves.

The researchers determined that the waves could quickly overwhelm the ship due to the flat base of the ship and the large size.

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Since large ships need water to stay afloat, if the ship was suspended in this way, it could “break in half”.

“(The waves) are stiff, they are high – we have measured waves of more than 30 Mets (ER),” said Boxall in the documentary.

“If this happens, it can flow in two or three minutes.”

Winds of the Hurricane Fiona

“The American Navy and the American Coast Guard argue that there are no supernatural explanations for disasters at sea.” (Sébastien Vuagnat / AFP via Getty Images)

Australian scientist Karl Kruszelnicki echoes Boxall’s theory.

“The number (ships and planes) which disappears in the Bermuda triangle is the same as around the world in percentage,” he told The Independent in 2017.

He says that human error and poor weather conditions are probably the source of the disappearances that contributed to the superstition associated with the Bermuda triangle, Fox News Digital reported.

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The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) said in a 2010 report: “There is no evidence that mysterious disappearances occur with greater frequency in the Bermuda triangle than in any other large, a well -traveled area of ​​the ocean.”

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“The American Navy and the American Coast Guard maintain that there are no supernatural explanations for sea disasters,” also noted the Noaa.

“Their experience suggests that the combined forces of nature and human bankability even exceed the most incredulous science fiction.”

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