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The following works on the Bermuda Triangle mention the Marine Sulphur Queen: Bermuda Triangle article in Argosy magazine, February 1964 ; Into the Bermuda Triangle: Pursuing the Truth Behind the World's Greatest Mystery, Gian J. Quasar; The Bermuda Triangle, Charles Berlitz (ISBN 0-385-04114-4) The Bermuda Triangle Mystery Solved (1975).
SS V. A. Fogg, a T2 tanker, lost 1 February 1972 mistakenly believed to have been lost in the Bermuda Triangle; SS Belridge Hills Sank 24 December 1972 in gale storm 800 miles south of Kodiak on trip from Vancouver to Yokohama. SS Marine Floridian, a T2 Tanker that in 1977 collided with a drawbridge in Virginia in a spectacular and costly accident.
SS: Chicora: 1895: Lake freighter that sank on 21 January 1895 in Lake Michigan. [11] SS: D.M. Clemson: 1908: Lake freighter vanished in a violent Lake Superior storm on 1 December 1908. [12] SS: Hippocampus: 1868: Lake freighter that capsized in Lake Michigan a few miles from Benton Harbor, Michigan. [13] SS: Marine Sulphur Queen: 1963
The Bermuda Triangle is an infamous airspace and area of ocean between Miami, Bermuda and Puerto Rico, where planes and ships seem to mysteriously vanish. Scientists offer explanation to Bermuda ...
The SS Marine Sulphur Queen, a tanker with a crew of 39 and a cargo of molten sulphur, was heard from for the last time, two days after its departure from Beaumont, Texas, en route to Norfolk, Virginia. Contact between the ship and its owner, Marine Transport Lines, Inc., was lost and the ship was reported missing two days later. [16]
Pick any one of the more than 50 ships or 20 planes that have disappeared in the Bermuda Triangle in the last century. Each one has a story without an ending, leading to a litany of conspiracy ...
The Bermuda Triangle, also known as the Devil's Triangle, is a loosely defined region between Florida, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico in the North Atlantic Ocean. Since the mid-20th century, the area has been the subject of an urban legend , which claims that many aircraft and ships have disappeared there under mysterious circumstances.
According to Bermuda Attractions, over 1,000 ships and planes have disappeared as far back as five centuries ago. Unfortunately for those 1,000 sunken crafts, Czerski's theory does not suggest ...