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The Brilliant | 20 World Mysteries No One Can Explain! @thebrilliantarmy | Uploaded March 2024 | Updated October 2024, 15 minutes ago.
There are certain mysteries that may never be solved, and the lack of answers only makes these enigmas more intriguing. Join us, as we look at 20 world mysteries no one can explain.

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The Bermuda Triangle

The legend of the Bermuda Triangle began with the unexplained disappearance of a group of military planes carrying 14 men off the coast of South Florida in December 1945. “We are entering white water, nothing seems right,” the flight leader supposedly said before they lost radio contact. Thirteen more servicemen sent to search for the missing fliers also vanished. They have linked other mysterious disappearances and encounters to the area of the ocean that is a triangle anchored by Bermuda, Florida, and Puerto Rico. Two British South American Airways passenger planes disappeared in the area a year apart in 1948 and 1949.

No explanations or wreckage were ever found. Victims credited to the area in many books and documentaries have included a large oil tanker, a pleasure yacht, and a small passenger plane. Books, including “The Devil’s Triangle,” “Limbo of the Lost,” and “The Riddle of the Bermuda Triangle,” suggest supernatural explanations. Aliens in spaceships, wormholes, and the mythical lost continent of Atlantis have been blamed, but no concrete evidence has ever been brought to light.

Lost City Of Atlantis

Atlantis, a likely mythical island nation mentioned in Plato’s dialogues “Timaeus” and “Critias,” has been an object of fascination among Western philosophers and historians for nearly 2,400 years. Plato describes it as a powerful and advanced kingdom that sank, in a night and a day, into the ocean around 9,600 B.C. The ancient Greeks were divided on whether Plato’s story was to be taken as history or mere metaphor. Since the 19th century, there has been renewed interest in linking Plato’s Atlantis to historical locations, most commonly the Greek island of Santorini, which was destroyed by a volcanic eruption around 1,600 B.C. In 1627, the English philosopher and scientist Francis Bacon published a utopian novel titled “The New Atlantis,” depicting, like Plato before him, a politically and scientifically advanced society on a previously unknown oceanic island.

In 1882, former U.S. Congressman Ignatius L. Donnelly published “Atlantis: The Antediluvian World,” which touched off a frenzy of works attempting to locate and learn from a historical Atlantis. Donnelly hypothesized an advanced civilization whose immigrants had populated much of ancient Europe, Africa, and the Americas, and whose heroes had inspired Greek, Hindu, and Scandinavian mythology. Donnelley’s theories were popularized and elaborated by turn-of-the-20th-century theosophists and are often incorporated into contemporary New Age beliefs. From time to time, archaeologists and historians locate evidence—a swampy, prehistoric city in coastal Spain; a suspicious undersea rock formation in the Bahamas—that might be a source of the Atlantis story. Of these, the site with the widest acceptance is the Greek island of Santorini, a half-submerged caldera created by the massive second millennium-B.C. volcanic eruption whose tsunami may have hastened the collapse of the Minoan civilization on Crete.
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