02-02-2002, 06:33 PM
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#2
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Former CEO
Neo is offline
Location: Longhorn country
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A much more outlandish theory:
Quote:
Long before John Hutchison began his pioneering experiments into electromagnetism and alternative energy, travelers in the Bermuda Triangle had reported odd occurrences involving electromagnetism: their ships or planes would be seized by a strange vapor, then all equipment would go haywire; unexplained fogs would sit over the ocean, yet in all cases the weather was not right for creating fogs, and there was certainly no reason for electromagnetic aberrations such as they reported.
These were, in due course, put down in the category of "sea lore," sensationalism, or attributed to occultists trying to push their supernatural views of nature. It didn't seem to matter that most of those reporting them were veteran pilots, shipmasters, and even Coast Guard officers.
These unusual phenomena quickly formed the backbone of the "mythos" of the Bermuda Triangle, the enigma of unexplained "forces," hints of the laws of nature running wild, of possible time warps, interdimensional transition, wormholes, and invisibility. To speak about them is to speak about the "supernatural," the impossible, and the occult . . .until now.
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from http://www.bermuda-triangle.org/Theo..._machine_.html
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