Website review: Howstuffworks "How the Bermuda Tria...

DaBug DaBug discovered this in Bizarre/Oddities 4 reviews since Aug 5, 2006
icon tagsbizarre, unexplainable-phenomenon science.howstuffworks.com/bermuda-triangle.ht...

Thumbs up People who like this website

thesceneisdead15
Los Angeles
coalesce
California
12october02
Mesa
chillami
Eagle Mountain
Vmold
G-Town
StarDust
Calgary
andyhiker
South Dakota
tamuril7
Missouri
kathleenmk13
Saint Louis
mattbuddah
Galesburg
seekyefirst
Mobile
niwilson
Bloomington
ambaleigh
Indiana
estel916
Kentucky
Tattoomeats
Shelbyville

StumbleUpon is the best way to discover great web sites, videos, photos, blogs and more - based on your interests. Everything is submitted and rated by the community. Discover, share and review the best of the web!

Thumbs up Reviews of this website

suefi rated 4 months ago
All that you can read about Bermuda Triangle. Well at least, there is some sort of explaination to this unexplainable pheonemenon!!
robbijg rated 10 months ago
How Stuff Works is a great website. I would never have thought about querying the site for the Bermuda Triangle.
Little-Wing rated 10 months ago
Image courtesy NASA Miyake Island, Japan "The Devil's Sea, also called the Formosa Triangle, is located off the coast of Japan in a region of the Pacific around Miyake Island, about 110 miles south of Tokyo. Like the Bermuda Triangle, the Devil's Sea doesn't appear on any official maps, but the name is used by Japanese fishermen. The area is known for strange disappearances of ships and planes - at least by those in the United States. Another myth is that, like the Bermuda Triangle, the Devil's Sea is the only other area where a compass points to true north rather than magnetic north (more about this later). One popular theory is that volcanic activity around the area, particularly an underwater volcano, could be responsible for the disappearances."
This page is not affiliated with howstuffworks.com.