The culprit makes the missing ship in Bermuda triangle

British scientists believe that poison waves higher than 30 meters are the culprits sinking many ships in the Bermuda triangle.

The expert team at the University of Southampton, UK, speculated that the natural phenomenon of the waves could explain the mysterious disappearances of ships in the Bermuda triangle and Sun yesterday. In the Channel 5 documentary Bermuda Triangle Enigma, they used indoor simulators to recreate a series of intense waves.

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Scientists calculating toxic waves in the Bermuda triangle can be as tall as 30 meters.(Photo: Fox).

Poison waves last only a few minutes, first observed by satellites in 1997 off South Africa. Some poison waves are as high as 30 meters. The team built a model of USS Cyclops, the big ship missing in the Bermuda triangle in 1918, killing 300 people. Due to its large size and flat bottom, the model is quickly engulfed in simulation by water.

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The team simulated poison waves in indoor conditions.(Photo: Sun).

Dr. Simon Boxall, an ocean and Earth scientist, said the famous waters in the Atlantic Ocean could suffer three big storms coming from different directions at the same time, the perfect condition to form toxic waves. . Boxall was convinced the rising water could cause a Cyclops-sized ship to break in half.

"There are many storms coming from the north and south at the same time. If more storms come from Florida, deadly poison waves can form. They are tall and steep. We calculate the waves higher than 30. The bigger the ship, the worse it will be damaged.You can imagine if a poison wave has two peaks while there is nothing to support below the ship, the ship will break in half. can sink in 2 - 3 minutes, " Boxall said.

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The Bermuda Triangle is located between Florida, Bermuda and Puerto Rico.(Photo: Sun).

The Bermuda Triangle is the waters in the northwest of the Atlantic Ocean, stretching 700,000km between Florida, Bermuda and Puerto Rico. The area is located on many cruise lines and claimed the lives of more than 1,000 people in the last 100 years.