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They Found a City Under the Bermuda Triangle - YouTube
Channel: BRIGHT SIDE
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I donât know about you (and I really donât
know about youâŠ
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thatâs a good thing, huh?), but I sometimes
like to have some light-hearted fun when it
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comes to mysteries and conspiracy theory stories.
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The only thing thatâs even more fun, is
checking the facts and trying to debunk them.
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And what else has more crazy theories swirling
around it than the Bermuda Triangle?
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Can you guess which ones are true and which
are fake?
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1) The bottomless ocean and vile whirlpools.
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Letâs start with something not too far out
of this world.
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As you probably already know, the Bermuda
Triangle is situated near the Bahama Islands.
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And if not for its huge mysterious neighbor,
the Bahamas would be a mystery in and of itself.
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Turns out, thereâs a strange structure around
the bottom of the islands.
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The bottom of the ocean here is inconsistent.
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Every now and then, the otherwise sandy floor
is replaced by giant dark holes, like a living
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place for some giant eel.
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Of course, weâre not talking about sea monsters
here.
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At least for now.
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The most common problem with those caverns,
named Blue Holes, is that sometimes, tidal
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waves can make them produce vortices and whirlpools.
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Experienced divers, who love blue holes with
all their hearts, say that theyâre like
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waterfalls in the middle of the sea.
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They suck thousands of gallons of water into
the depths, and nothing can escape them.
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So can these whirlpools be guilty of all the
disappearances happening in the Bermuda Triangle?
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To be fair, itâs not plausible.
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First, the whirlpools mostly appear in the
inland Blue Holes, situated on the Island
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and not in the ocean.
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And secondly, even if a vortex could sink
a small boat, it wouldnât likely be an issue
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for big ships, let alone airplanes â theyâre
far above that in every possible meaning.
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2) What lurks in the depth of Blue Holes?
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Only about 20% of Blue Holes were ever explored,
and there are probably a lot more of them
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in the Bahamas area than we think.
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All we know is that they might relate to each
other via branching tunnels and caverns.
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This fact alone might explain why some ships
vanished in Bermuda and were never found.
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Brace yourself, weâre now stepping into
the crazy territory with this next question:
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what if something could drag a ship down there?
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The local people of Andros Island, part of
the Bahamas, have a legend in their folklore
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about a giant, vile octopus-like creature
named Lusca.
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Nobody knows how big this creature could be,
but all legends point to the Blue Holes as
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its home.
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Impossible, right?
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Well, strangely enough, some giant octopuses
were seen, and even caught, nearby, though
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they werenât nearly as big as the legendary
creature.
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But you know how it goes; everything is way
bigger if youâre scared enough, so this
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legend may well be partially legit.
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On the other hand, a giant octopus capable
of dragging ships to rock bottom?
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None have grown to a size this big as far
as we know, so this version doesnât seem
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too concerning.
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But still sounds too cool not to mention!
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3) The city on the bottom of the Bermuda Triangle
Among paranormal researchers and investigators,
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there are as many Bermuda Triangle fans, as
fans of the ancient lost city of Atlantis.
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Can you imagine the excitement when the first
news about strange structures on the bottom
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of the Bermuda Triangle was released?
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Some believe that people of Atlantis had some
unimaginable power at their disposal.
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As those believers say, the leftover influence
of this power could be the source of electromagnetic
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anomalies guilty of misdirecting ships and
planes, and leading them to their demise.
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It all might sound questionable, and even
laughable, if not for the fact that there
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really are some strange structures lying at
the bottom of the Bermuda Triangle.
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Some even reported the presence of giant pyramids
here; and in some articles it was stated that
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they were made of glass.
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In reality, the only giant things here are
overstatements.
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There certainly arenât any glass pyramids.
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The structures donât look like pyramids
at all.
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And to even call them âstructuresâ, as
in the remains of man-made buildings, would
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be a bit too generous for whatâs there.
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These structures are called the Bimini Road.
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It lies northwest from the shore of North
Bimini island.
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In fact, it consists of two strange rock formations.
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Both look suspiciously like building blocks.
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At first, it seemed like these rocks were
too linear and rounded to be of natural origin.
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The main hypothesis stated that Bimini Road
was the only visible part of a more complex
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man-made structure, buried in the sand of
the ocean bottom.
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Further research showed that underlying ground
layers beneath the Bimini Road feature nothing
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but bedrock, with no possible cavities in
it.
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That totally excludes any possibility of these
rocks being a part of a building.
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Also, no matter how close researchers looked
into Bimini Road, they never found any evidence
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of masonry on the rocks.
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So, what can we conclude about the ancient
city on the bottom of the Bermuda Triangle?
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I guess, sometimes, rocks are just rocks;
thereâs no reason to search for Atlantis
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in all of them.
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Debunked!
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4) Iâm Not Saying It's Aliens, ButâŠ
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Donât worry, Iâm not going to cloud your
eyes with some weird sightings or other unreliable
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evidence.
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Something much more tangible lies within the
borders of the Bermuda Triangle.
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With all the stories around the area, itâs
no wonder that the floor of the ocean is littered
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with shipwrecks from all over the world and
from all ages.
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And as you can imagine, this is a sweet spot
for treasure hunters brave enough to challenge
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the mysterious waters of the Bermuda Triangle.
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One of these treasure hunters was lucky enough
to come across a secret map, made from the
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orbit of the planet in the 60s, during one
of the first flights into outer space.
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This map reveals lots of shipwreck coordinates
in the Caribbean area.
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One of them wasnât marked as a shipwreck,
but as an âunidentified objectâ.
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If that doesnât call some attention, then
I donât know what does.
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The luckiest treasure hunter in the world
believed that these coordinates should lead
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to the remains of the ship that was part of
Christopher Columbusâ expedition.
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What was awaiting the explorer at 300ft below
the oceanâs surface was possibly even more
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significant.
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It was an object later classified as a USO
â unidentified submerged object.
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It was nothing like a man-made ship, and there
was no way something like it could have been
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formed purely by nature.
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Plastered with layers and layers of coral,
the object was unidentifiable.
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But it was huge, with long protrusions sticking
out of it in bunches of 5 in different directions.
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Two more identical objects were found nearby;
so the pattern of protrusion wasnât just
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random, like a freak of nature.
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The strangest thing?
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I canât debunk it!
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You may think Iâm sold on this finding because
I really have nothing to show against it.
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But I donât think itâs something extraordinary,
because thereâs no further research, no
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scientific articles â just nothing!
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I donât think something like this would
be ignored, but who knows.
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Maybe some investigation on strange objects
is going on right now, and the scientific
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community is getting ready to change our outlook
on the universe once and for all.
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5) The Hutchison Effect.
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Sounds super-scientific, I know.
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And believe me, Iâm certainly not here to
try to debunk science.
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What Iâm talking about lies somewhere beyond
the boundaries of traditional knowledge.
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A lot of Bermuda Triangle stories feature
reports, allegedly received from missing aircraft
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and ships.
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There are reports about strange cloud formations,
tunnels in the air or above water, or the
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sudden appearance of thick fog sparkling with
electric lights.
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As legend suggests, some of these anomalies
are not only capable of completely disorienting
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any vessel, but also removing them from where
they were altogether!
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Some enthusiasts of this theory draw a line
between it and the experimentations of Joseph
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Hutchison, who was trying to prove that electromagnetic
fields can collide with each other and produce
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all kinds of disturbances to reality itself.
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Heâs done countless experiments in which
electromagnetic fields were able to make objects
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levitate, fly out of the water, and begin
to illuminate.
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Hutchison himself thinks that similar things
may have their place in special places like
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the Bermuda Triangle.
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Now you probably have an idea why Iâm not
too confident about how scientific this phenomenon
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is.
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A lot of Hutchisonâs experiments were even
recorded on camera, but it doesnât serve
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as documental proof.
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It mostly does the opposite.
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These experiments mostly look like a magic
trick, and not like a real scientific effort.
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None of the Hutchisonâs effects were ever
proved to be real.
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All the mentioned theories have one cool thing
in common.
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They all show how imaginative people can be.
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And letâs not forget that imagination is
the foundation for exploration and the pursuit
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of real knowledge.
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And one good piece of evidence may turn the
table upside down in no time.
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We just must wait with our feet on the ground
and our eyes beyond the sky.
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Even the Bermuda Triangle mystery might eventually
be solved, and I canât wait to know the
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solution to this riddle.
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What theory would you call the most solid
and trustworthy?
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Let me know in the comment section!
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If you learned something new today, then give
this video a like and share it with a friend.
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But â hey! â donât go run off to have
lunch with Mr. Hutchinson down on Bimini Road
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just yet!
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We have over 2,000 cool videos for you to
check out.
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All you have to do is pick the left or right
video, click on it, and enjoy!
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Stay on the Bright Side of life!
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