In
a strange coincidence, I stumbled across the second part of Josh Gates’ episode
dealing with the Bermuda Triangle. I was able to learn the results of the
experiment he had conducted with a couple of scientists. They launched a
balloon into the upper atmosphere to find out if there were any anomalies to
explain the trouble with compasses and other electronics. Yes, they found a
spike in the
electromagnetic radiation that they couldn’t explain. Interesting,
but not too illuminating.
Josh Gates and me... published here to show that I'm not really bald. |
He
also was involved in an experiment created to explain the disappearance of the USS
Cyclops, a strange looking Navy ship designed to carry coal to the fleet.
That mission explains the weird metallic superstructure. Using a university’s
facilities that had been designed to recreate ocean conditions, they created
what is now known as a rogue wave to attempt to sink the ship. I expected it to
do so, but not with the rapidity that it did. The wave hit the exact model of
the ship and took it down in seconds… no time for a radio call, no time to for
the sailors to abandon the ship and no time for any sort of rescue. One minute
the ship was on the surface and the next it was under water. I might add that
there are some portions of the Bermuda Triangle that are the deepest in the
North Atlantic. If a ship or a plane sank there, no one is ever going to find
any sign of it.
I
was more interested in Josh’s take on Flight 19, a five-plane formation of
Avenger torpedo planes that disappeared in 1945. This is the cornerstone of the
Bermuda Triangle mystery. It seems inexplicable and I wondered just what Josh
would do about it. He gave a good account of the preliminaries meaning that
weather at the time of take- off wasn’t great, the make-up of the flight, and
its training mission. Everything was fine as they approached the target, Hens
and Chicken Shoals, some 70 or so nautical miles from their base.
Once
beyond that, they seemed to have drifted off course. The Flight made a
scheduled turn, but the Flight Leader, Charles Taylor, said that both his
compasses had malfunctioned. From that point, it seems they made several turns,
first flying one direction and then another until they ran out of gas. Radio
contact had been lost prior to that and when it was obvious that the Flight was
down, a Martin Mariner with a crew of 13 was launched to attempt a rescue. That
aircraft slipped off the radar and disappeared as well.
But,
unlike the Avengers, there were witnesses to this part of the disaster. The
crew of a ship in the area saw an aerial explosion. When they reached the scene
of the crash, they spotted floating debris but the bad weather forced them to
abandon the search. They next day, no one could find the wreckage… but the
ship’s crew did get a good fix on the location.
All
this is important because Josh, with another crew using high tech sonar, were able
to see the ocean bottom in what looked like high definition detail. Scanning
the area, they found debris on the ocean floor that looked suspiciously like
the remains of an aircraft. Diving down, Josh found what looked like the type
of engine that the Martin Mariner had used, and a propeller blade, or rather
the engine hub with all three blades on it. Given all that, it is almost
certain that they had found the remains of Martin Mariner. Although Josh and
crew were unable to recover the engine or the propeller, it was suggested that
it should be recovered at some point.
Given
that, and what he learned about Flight 19, Josh suggested that a
combination of
events doomed the Flight. It was a cascade of circumstances that brought down
the planes and had there been any variation in those events, even a slight one,
the tragedy might have been avoided. The conclusion is that it wasn’t some
mysterious force that brought down the Flight, it wasn’t aliens and it wasn’t
some sort of interdimensional warp… it was bad weather, faulty navigation and a
series of other events that combined to doom the Flight.
Again,
I was surprised by the rationale brought to this. Josh suggested at the end
that there might be some weird weather and magnetic anomalies in the Bermuda
Triangle but there was nothing supernatural. That was a conclusion that I had
reached many years ago after reading Lawrence Kusche’s book.
Of
course, having met Josh (yes, I have to bring that up again), I’m not surprised
that he came to the conclusions he did, based on the evidence and the
experiments in which he was involved. For those who wish to learn the truth
about this, Expedition Unknown has done a good job of relating the facts
without delving into the wild speculation that obscures the reality of the
situation. I believe that we can say “solved” to the mystery of the Bermuda
Triangle. It is delightful to see an intelligent documentary about the Bermuda
Triangle when there is so much nonsense out there.