Dark History - 56: Ghost Ships, Sunken Cities, And a Triangle of Doom - Disappearances from the Deep Blue Sea
Episode Date: September 28, 2022Welcome to the Dark History podcast. The Bermuda Triangle, the most mysterious shape on the entire planet. Seriously, why has no one been able to figure out what’s going on there?? It’s no mystery... that every year multiple ships and planes are lost to the triangle, and it’s been that way for centuries. So how come no one is able to figure out what the heck is going on?? In today’s episode, we look into the mystery behind the Bermuda Triangle and talk about some potential theories about it. But Bermie isn’t the only mysterious water disappearance we’re talking about, Oh Nay Nay. We’ll also dive into ghosts ships and lost sunken cities.Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi friends, I hope you're having a wonderful day today.
My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to my study, or just maybe my podcast
art history.
Hi, now if you don't know, this is a chance to tell a story like it is and to share the
history of stuff we would never think about.
So all you have to do is sit back, relax, and I'm going to tell you that hot, juicy history gas.
Now today's story is kind of fun because we all love a mystery. Do we? I don't know, but I like a
mystery. And there are mysteries lurking on earth that literally no one will ever solve, right? Now, it doesn't matter if you're in the military or a scientist or researcher, the ocean
scares like millions of people, right?
A lot of people have a figure of the ocean.
So much so that there's actually a word for it.
It's called Thalas' Lafobia.
Thalas' Lafobia.
Tha.
Lafobia.
Thalas' Lafobia.
Thalas' Lafobia. It's called Thalas' Lafobia. N lasso phobia. The lasso phobia is called the lasso phobia, nailed it.
Fear the sea.
So hey, it's a valid phobia.
You're allowed to be afraid of it.
I mean, after all, did you know that like experts say that more than 80% of the ocean has never been explored,
never seen, never touched by humans?
There are even parts of the ocean that light can't penetrate. So who the hell knows what could be hiding deep down in those blue waters.
Also, if you're watching this on YouTube, my lights are out back here. I just turned them on. You're welcome.
So back to the story. Human bodies, ships, airplanes. Maybe there's like a whole island utopia out there. I mean, we don't know. And many believe where there is darkness, there is terror
and mystery. So tonight, maybe, you know, we're all gonna go sleep with the fishes. Sometimes it feels
like no one is safe if water is involved, right? I mean, it's a substance we need to live, but
who knew that? Sometimes it's guided by a demonic presence, reaching its murky claws out of the waters to claim another soul.
Ooh, this is spooky!
The first mystery we're going to talk about is very creepy.
It's a ghost ship, spooky sound effect.
I know, have you ever heard of a ghost ship?
Well, it's the name of a ship that's been found usually under like mysterious circumstances,
just slowly floating around the waters
with no living people on board.
Some ghost ships are just, you know, ghost stories
or stories from like the Pirates of the Caribbean,
you know, the Black Pearl.
Honestly, no, I don't,
because I've never seen the Pirates of the Caribbean,
but I've been on the ride, so I kind of get it, right?
Anyways, what I'm actually
getting at is there's a really famous, famous ship that had some very mysterious circumstances
around it. And that is the Mary Celeste. I know, I know. This is a mystery that even experts
who've studied the case for years and years, they
can't seem to figure it out. And boy, does it give you the Hebe G.B.s. So this story, it starts
with a man named Captain Benjamin Briggs. Now, by 1872, Captain Briggs had been a captain
for like a long time, okay? He was tired. The sea life is very rough, and he's ready to just
turn in his captain's hat
and just work as a business man like all his other friends.
You know, he got married, he was a father,
he's turning into a family man,
he's just ready to settle down
and start this new chapter of his life.
But when he saw this really beautiful ship
named the Mary Celeste, it was up for sale.
Oh man, he just, he was like, it's speaking to me,
I cannot resist, I need to get this ship, he just, he was like, it's speaking to me. I cannot resist.
I need to get this ship.
I mean, it was beautiful.
It was like the 1800s version of a freaking yacht.
Mary Celeste was originally built in 1861,
but had just had a $10,000 renovation,
which today is like spending over $300,000
on a renovation.
So it was nice.
It was real nice.
It was a massive 100-foot-long ship made of
solid cedar wood and weighed like 282 tons, which like side note, how do you even build a ship
that big? How do you get it into the water? I don't get it. Do you build a ship directly in the water?
Do you scoot it in? I've got a lot of questions. Let's ask Noah. He had a big ship and animals. It
was a big-ass ship. And this ship was something called a merchant ship.
And this is a ship that would take anything you needed to buy, sell,
or trade locally or internationally.
So getting this was a good business opportunity
for the seasoned semen, Captain Briggs.
You know, it's like good money.
He was hired by a wine merchant
to bring 1700 barrels of alcohol to Genoa, Italy,
on the Marysa Leste. I guess the wine merchant needed extra barrels of alcohol to make his wine
stronger, which good for him, you know, great. So with the wine barrels on board,
Captain Briggs and his crew make a pit stop in New York City to pick up his wife Sarah and their
two-year-old daughter Sophia.
Captain Briggs wanted to bring his family along for the journey. This was just supposed to be a very,
you know, laid back easy business trip that could double as a cute little vacation for the family.
So, on a rainy morning in November of 1872, Captain Briggs and his family, as well as seven crew members, but not their coats, and excitedly bored the Mary Celeste.
On the ship was Briggs' first mate Albert,
second crewmate Andrew, Edward the ship steward or manager,
and four German seamen, Arian, Gottlib,
and two brothers named Volkert and Boz.
So Briggs himself actually chose his team,
and they all had great reputations,
and were described as
Peaceable in first class sailors. So like we've said before this wasn't Briggs first rodeo
He knew the ocean and he knew how to handle a ship and also he had a great track record
I mean he had led many successful voyages and unlike many other captains at the time
He wasn't a drunk. I mean, that was rare.
That's not like me being shady.
That was rare.
In fact, Briggs was something called a T-totler.
And this was like an old timey way of saying that he was straight edge.
You know, like they don't drink, they don't do drugs or anything.
I was gonna make like a straight edge joke, but honestly, good for them.
They're doing the lords work out there, keeping their bodies pure.
Let them have that.
What I'm getting at is that Briggs wasn't tipping into any of the booths that he was taking to Italy, but someone would.
The journey to Genoa should have only taken like a few weeks, but I guess the weather turned out
to be pretty rough. I mean, they were sailing at the end of November, so basically winter, not
exactly the ideal time to be sailing around the world, but you know, it's all right, here we are. A few days into the journey, something much worse seemed to have happened to Mary
Celeste. Okay, so picture this, it's December 5th, a British captain named Morehouse is sailing
his ship through Portugal. It's a different ship, okay. Now it's a chilly, foggy day, okay. He decides
to go above the deck and check out the seas real quick.
He looks to the ocean and in the distance he sees something moving. He's like, what's that?
What is that? The fog it clears. He's like, oh, it's a ship. Great. And it's not just any ship.
He actually recognizes it. He's like, hey, I know that ship. That's the Mary Celeste.
He continues to watch the ship and he can tell that the movements seem to be all over
the place, like the captain is drunk, or maybe something is off.
So he calls to his men to come and look at the ship and they're just as confused.
You know, why would it be moving like that in the ocean?
And as the ship gets closer, they notice their sails are all messed up.
They're all in the wrong direction, some of them are even missing. The ship floats closer to them, and now all of Morehouse's crew are jumping up and
down sending signals to Mary Celeste like, hey, are you guys okay over there? You good, man?
You good, bro? Asking if they need any help, but they're not going to any type of response
from the Mary Celeste. And that's when they start kind of maybe putting pieces together,
and they're like, I think something might be off here. The Captain realizes that the Mary Celeste
left New York eight days before their ship. And it shouldn't even be in the middle of Portugal.
And why are there ropes hanging off the side of the ship? That's when the crew looks at each other
and realizes something is very, very wrong. Now Captain Morehouse decides to send a few of his crew over to investigate
the situation. So two semen hop in a raft and paddle on over to the Mary Celeste. They climb a board
and they look around and realize that no one's there. No one's manning the wheel. No one's steering.
The whole ship was completely empty. There was no sign of a captain, no sign of the captain's wife, the crew, the two-year-old
Sophia.
What in the world was going on?
Aliens, that's what everyone thinks.
I know.
I know.
Aliens, always.
If it ain't aliens, it's women, you know?
Welcome to Dark History.
Right away, they noticed that the two of the hatches, you know, those trapdoors
that lead down to the rest of the ship, well, they were left open. Now, this isn't a great sign,
but they are there to help. So they make their way below the deck. Maybe they're down there and,
you know, right? I mean, anything could be there. Blood, bodies, the cracking, jaws. Well, it's
weirder than any of that because at least they'd have some answers.
But all they find is a few feet of water,
which I guess isn't a bad thing for a ship to speak,
but there are no bodies and no other clues
as to what happened.
In Captain Briggs' room, they find a sword
stashed under his bed and the ship's log,
but the last entry was made on November 25th,
nine whole days before. And this entry
didn't say anything about like a storm or cause any type of alarm. Briggs had noted their
location, which was 400 nautical miles away from where they were now. Nothing is adding
up and nothing's making sense. The semen realize that the Mary Celeste lifeboat is missing.
So, okay, you know, maybe, maybe there was a storm and they took the
lifeboat. But if there was a storm that scared the crew into leaving, why hadn't they taken any
food with them and why hadn't they mentioned it in the ship's log? So the whole thing, too many
questions, you know? So there are actually a few theories out there as to what happened to the
Mary Celeste. One of them was the thought that maybe a storm rolled in
forcing the ship completely off course.
And if that happened, the captain probably told his crew
to abandon ship.
This doesn't make a whole lot of sense
because again, there was nothing physically wrong
with the Mary Celeste, which most likely would have happened
during a crazy storm.
There's another theory out there that some people think some sort of giant sea monster must have
jumped out of the ocean and swallowed everyone whole, which sounds fun. But you know,
there were a lot of myths about like the sea monsters back then, and with no evidence about where
the Mary Celeste passengers went, people were like, yeah, it's gotta be sea monsters then.
Many can't get on board with that one,
because the ship would have been destroyed in some kind of way
of a big sea monster jumped up,
and like eight everyone on the ship.
But I'm not saying it's not possible, right?
There's another interesting theory, which are pirates.
I know, I know what you're thinking,
like barely pirates come on.
But it's actually not a stupid theory,
because back then pirates were a very much real threat,
especially if they came across a merchant ship.
The pirates they could shoot at you, jump on board,
rob you, kill the captain, take over.
And that was actually what Captain Morehouse,
who found the Mary Celeste said.
He believed that pirates did it.
And that one kind of seems to make sense, but let me further explain, Captain Warhouse, who found the Mary Celeste said, he believed that pirates did it.
And that one kind of seems to make sense,
but let me further explain,
because here's my theory.
You ready?
It's a good one.
I solved it.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
The sailors that found the Mary Celeste
were the pirates.
A theory, not a fact, theory.
Plot twist, right?
Bet you did not see that one coming,
but hear me out.
First of all, there was no signs of violence, right? Bet you did not see that one coming, but hear me out. First of all,
there was no signs of violence, right? Pirates? Pretty violent. Campy pirates. They would have
left some... They were stole everything, and everything was still on the ship. Second,
the Mary Celeste was found in great condition, no leaks, no major issues, and again, the captain
was great about filling out the ship's log, updating it all the time like he was supposed to.
And then suddenly it just stopped. The food was left on board, along with everyone's personal
stuff like jewelry. And here's the even crazier part. The day before the Mary Celeste set sail,
Captain Briggs had dinner with the other captain, Captain Morehouse, coincidence, I think not.
Now I'm not going to say Captain Morehouse and his sailors murdered everyone on the Marry
Celeste, but hey, anything's possible if you just believe, you know.
But to me, it sounds like Morehouse and his crew boarded the Marry Celeste, maybe forced
everyone into like the lifeboat, told them to go suck a dick and fuck off and like go into the ocean and they took the ship to cash in
on like the sweet reward if they turned in that ghost ship because when captain more house found the ship
that's exactly what he and his crew did. They brought the Mary Celeste to a port city nearby and there, the British authorities questioned Captain Morehouse, and we're like, Oh, you just found this super valuable ship out in the
ocean. Hmm, that's a little so special. It's kind of like someone saying they
just found a Ferrari on the side of the road with the keys in the ignition. And
now they want to sell it. Would you buy it? Or would you have some questions? I'd
be like, how much? You know, there's always a price. Another interesting piece of information, remember the booze that Captain
Briggs was transporting to Italy? Well, by the time Morehouse turned the ship in,
nine of those booze barrels were empty. And like I mentioned earlier, Captain
Briggs, he was straight edge. And since he was in charge, it was very likely his crew
wasn't drinking either. So that leaves his wife and two-year-old,
which I'm gonna just go ahead and say
they probably weren't drinking either, but I don't know.
So plenty of reasons for the British authorities
to be a little suspicious, right?
But they end up giving more house and his crew
a modest little consolation prize
for hauling the ship to shore.
It was a very valuable ship,
and the booze especially was still worth
like a pretty penny. On board was about 30,000 dollars worth of alcohol barrels. And today that
would be like 800,000 dollars. Would you push some people overboard for that amount? I'm laughing
because I think some of us would. And maybe that's exactly what would happen. You just never know.
All we know for sure is that the ocean seems like the perfect place to, I don't know,
get rid of 10 people in their bodies. I'm not suggesting anything, like for you to do, but back then,
maybe. Listen, the ocean is a very big, large place. It's a body of water, right? So it makes sense
like some people would go missing over the years. But what if I told you whole civilizations have disappeared into the ocean? Like
pwp, sucked in, gone. And one of the most famous of these lost civilizations,
Atlantis. Now that we've touched a little bit on a ghost ship, let's talk about a ghost town.
And one of my favorites, and a lot of people's favorites.
Atlantis!
And no, not that fun Disney movie that still holds up.
I'm talking about a real city that was written about our good friend,
Greek philosopher, Plato.
He's not my good friend, I don't know him.
I'm just kidding.
Plato wrote lots of books in his time,
and in one of them he talks about a perfect civilization.
Something he called a utopia made up of half gods, half humans. Now I'm imagining a whole society
of hotties. No, I'm not. Anyway, the utopia he was writing about was called Atlantis. Atlantis
was a huge island in the Mediterranean, almost a million square miles, which is like
6 California's, okay, it was huge.
You would have to try really hard to miss that thing.
The Atlantis Empire was actually made up of a bunch of smaller islands with little canals
and modes between Think of Venice, which irony is also a sinking city.
Anyways, the Atlantis islands were lush, green, and beautiful, full of exotic animals.
And the thing that really sets Atlantis apart
was how advanced it was.
I mean, for starters, they had running water,
which is huge, not really a thing back then,
but not just that, they had hot and cold running water.
Pfft!
Ground breaking, ground breaking.
Now, this place Atlantis even had a racetrack
for horses
that circled the entire island.
And because of their strong naval base in God-like warriors,
Atlantis basically dominated the lands
around them in the Mediterranean.
Most Atlantians, besides being ripped in Godly,
were also famously good people.
They were pure of heart, super moral,
just absolute angels living in paradise.
But nothing good lasts forever, they say. The Atlanteans got comfortable, they even got greedy,
and these good people became morally bankrupt. The legend goes that Zeus?
Oh, are you Zeus? Now, Zeus didn't have a triton, did he? Oh, you're Poseidon!
Okay, I thought you were Ariel's dad.
The legend goes at Zeus, who was basically
the big daddy Greek god.
He sees this and he's like, no you guys,
you're having too much fun, you're not being good people.
You had to let all this go to your head.
Now you have to pay the price.
So Zeus curses land.
He brings in huge earthquakes, raging firestorms,
complete and utter destruction.
Could you imagine?
Mining your own business and fireballs
are flowing at your face.
And like the heavens are falling from up above.
Buildings are collapsing and just crushing crowds of people.
And the whole time the ground is splitting below their feet.
The ocean around them starts rising higher and higher, just swallowing people along with
it.
And you only have a few men's before seeing nothing but water all around you.
Ocean swallowed Atlantis right up.
Never to be seen again.
And that's why they call it the lost city of Atlantis. Whole civilization. Poof. Gone. Never heard from
again. I know you're thinking Bailey, Bailey, Bailey, and this sounds so fake.
Zeus. An angry ocean swallowing up people. There's no way that's real. We'll
shut up, okay? But let me tell you something. Plato, the guy who wrote about
Atlantis in the first place, you see, he loved combining fact and fiction in his writing. I mean, he is a pretty
pro-edict guy. This Plato guy was huge in the study of philosophy, and so if everything else
he did is studied today as fact, why is this singled out as complete fiction? Maybe there's some truth
in there. Maybe if we squint, we'll come to light. Plus, back then, people really thought natural disasters
were like a punishment from the gods above.
Okay, so, um, look, you guys,
this chair isn't comfortable.
And if you've been following me for a while,
you know my chair struggles.
I am not satisfied with any chair ever available
on the market.
I just had to tell you that because you're gonna see me moving around a lot
if you're watching this on YouTube.
My butt hurts.
Okay, but let me get back to the story.
Okay, so look, if you're a sinner,
God punishes the people and gets rid of your land.
Like that's what, you know, great.
So there's a good chance that there's some fact
to the story of Atlantis,
or at least like some version of it, right?
I mean, there are people so sure that Atlantis is out there
that they've dedicated their whole lives to finding it.
Explorers have looked in the oceans of Scandinavia,
Spain, Greece, the Canary Islands, wherever the hell that is,
just searching for these lost islands.
Here's the kicker.
It may have already been found.
Atlantis? It may have already been found. Atlantis?
It might have been.
You see, with all of the mystery
and cool stories surrounding Atlantis,
people are obviously gonna build it up in their heads.
It's kind of like when you're a friend,
your friend Deb or Joan is like,
hey girl, I've met this amazing guy.
He's so hot.
Oh, I thought, and he's got a's so hot. Oh, and I thought.
And he's got a six pack.
And he's just incredible.
And he does things for me.
He takes me out for dinner in an hour or something.
And then you finally meet this guy.
And you're like, that guy?
That one?
Like, Joan, are you all right girl?
You need some glasses?
Are we looking at the same person?
Oh my god.
It's because we have on the love goggles, right? And they, yeah.
Anyways, it's possible that this has happened with Atlantis. I mean, over time, it's been so
over-hyped. The point that people are out there looking for like this whole utopia, this,
whatever they've created in their minds. But the thing is, like, there have been lots of sunken
cities found that could have been Atlantis.
I mean, they were in the right area of the world.
They were from the right time period, but maybe people were just underwhelmed or let down
and they're like, there's no way that's Atlantis.
Atlantis wouldn't look like that, you know?
So if it happened to so many other cities, why couldn't Atlantis be one of them?
Before you say I've completely lost it, let's talk about the cities we have cold hard proof about. Hey everybody, look at my socks. Aren't they cute? You know who
sent them to me? Best Fiends, not sponsored, but you know I have worked with best fiends before.
They're like, bitch, you love this app so much. We're gonna send you some socks.
I live in them best fiends. I live in them best fangs, I live in them.
So we're back.
These cities that have been found underwater you ask,
well, I'm here to tell you that they're actually so cool.
Ah, I spent hours on Google just looking at the pictures
because they're so cool and it's so freaky.
There's literally whole cities underwater.
Ah, the fish must love it.
Because you know, like when you get a new cold fish
and then you put little castles and stuff in the bowl
and you watch them and you're like,
oh my god, I know you're living
just going in and out of that little castle.
Like they love it, right?
I bet the fish is love it.
Oh yeah, okay, back to straight.
They're just whole cities underwater.
Like one second, everything's fine,
La Di Falken Duh, you know, and then the
next thing, giant tsunami, gone, done so. Now, one of the reasons experts believe that Atlantis
could be real is because there's a long history of whole villages, islands, and cities getting
completely wiped out. This was kind of a common occurrence for ancient Greek civilizations.
I mean, earthquake, tsunamis,
and even volcanic eruptions completely destroyed
entire civilizations.
I mean, there's Pompeii, hello, you know, Pompeii,
and Crete, I didn't know about Crete.
I just learned about it right now.
It's very second.
Oh my God, wait, let me tell you,
because there's actually another city,
ancient Alexandria, yep, she's a full-ass sunken city in Egypt.
Under water, buildings, statues, everything.
Look up the pictures. Wow.
Divers and researchers have documented it, and the pictures are so cool.
This city is perfectly preserved underwater, but again, nobody really knows how it got there in the first place.
So if this whole city is underwater, why can't Atlantis be, right?
Also kind of related,
but there was this huge library in Alexandria, Egypt
that burned down in thousands of years of ancient knowledge,
burned up with it.
Many claim that the answer for Atlantis could have been in there.
I highly recommend a good Google of it,
or maybe I can do like an
episode about it because it's wild. Yeah, it's really interesting. Of course there are theories.
There's always theories. Of course, there's one theory that a volcanic eruption in 1500 BC destroyed
a bunch of Greek islands. An Atlantis could have been one of them. Another theory that people
believe is that in 2010, people think that they found
Atlantis as ruins near the coast of Spain.
So this got people thinking,
well maybe we're just looking in the wrong place
or maybe we already found it
or maybe we're just being impatient
because on top of that, we are still discovering
new things, new islands today.
Like in 2021, a new island was just discovered
off the coast of Greenland.
And now all the maps have to be updated. Maybe we just like waited out or something.
I don't know. Okay, look, we can't talk about mysterious oceanic
disappearances or as I'm calling them damp disappearances without talking
about the Bermuda Triangle. Now you've probably heard about this one before, right?
Everybody has heard of the Bermuda Triangle.
And if you haven't, then I don't know what you've been doing.
What have you been doing?
I feel like it was all anyone talked about in middle school.
And then we all just kind of forgot about it
and decided to go to Turks and Kekos
was worth the risk, well I haven't forgotten. You'll never find me in Turks and Kekos was worth the risk? Well, I haven't forgotten.
You'll never find me in Turks or Kekos. Either way, the Bermuda Triangle still snatching
ships and taking names. It's not a thing of the Pass Barbra to this day. It's still taking
lives. So what I'm asking you to do is pack your water wings because we're going to deep
dive into the Bermuda Triangle. So ourd-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d- training mission was called flight number 19. That's what this mission is called. So it was a very
routine thing that they were doing and it was nothing new, right? Okay, great. The planes that they
were flying were called torpedo bombers because they could go... they could go so fast, I guess,
up to 300 miles per hour fast. These planes did not book around. They were considered the work
horses of World War II because they were so reliable and the
military could always count on the bombers and their pilots to get the job done.
It was said that on the day of the training mission, the weather was like super sunny and
unseasonably warm.
What we do know is that around 3 o'clock p.m., everything was going according to plan.
People were out fishing on their ships
and they see the plains like in the sky heading safely east around that time, but then everything
changes. Around 3.40 PM, a distress call comes in from one of the lead pilots on this mission.
Now this was strange because this pilot had thousands of flight hours under his belt and had
flown through World War II.
I mean, this guy knew what he was doing.
Anyways, so this Lieutenant calls in saying both of his compasses are out and that he was
lost.
He's freaking out because without his compasses, he had no idea how to get back to Fort
Lauderdale and he had no idea where he was in the first place.
So he's asking for help from
the naval base. They're going back and forth, just in emergency mode, and then all of a sudden
silence. One plane after another goes dark and then all five planes in the training exercise just your size just who've vanished. Everybody back on the base was listening for updates and they're scratching their heads
like what the hell is going on?
Nobody could explain how 14 very experienced airmen in 5 legit planes like some of the
best airplanes ever could just vanish into thin air.
No trace, where'd they go?
Nobody knows.
Despite this being one of the biggest air and sea searches in history, that would be
the last time anyone had ever heard from them ever.
Again, that sucks.
Could you imagine where they go?
That's so weird.
Anyways, this wasn't the first time some weirdness was documented in this particular area
of the Atlantic Ocean.
You see, all the way back in 1492,
everyone's favorite rapist and murderer, Christopher Columbus, he was out sailing, crossing the ocean blue,
unknowingly towards the Bermuda Triangle. Oh yeah, get him Bermuda, get him. At night, I guess he's
out there. He sees like some bright, mysterious lights moving around in the distance out in the ocean. He calls his crew to take a look,
but every time they would,
the lights seemed to vanish and disappear.
And they really thought nothing of it.
Like maybe it was just a ship in the distance.
Mary Celeste is at you, you know?
But then Christopher Columbus said that a glowing object
came out of the water and started shooting towards the sky.
This obviously freaked everybody out.
I think all of
us would be scared. Or maybe there's on drugs. I mean, to be fair, we could all take this with
the grain of salt. I think we all know that Christopher Columbus isn't that credible. He was known to
get a little creative with his stories, add a little flavor to that. But my point is that Bruno
Triangle has been suspicious for quite some time. And Christopher Columbus' little journal entry marks the first time somebody had written
down that there was something fishy going on beneath the waters in this little area.
It wasn't just some like normal part of the ocean.
And then we go to March of 1918, okay.
The USS Cyclops is a ship that was used by the United States Navy,
and it's like this big old ship and made it all the way through World War I.
They named it Cyclops because it was a freaking beast.
And this isn't a ship that just goes missing. It's huge.
It's got sharp corners, it looks like the Tin Man, it's indestructible.
You couldn't even put a dent in this bad boy.
This ship honestly looks aggressive. If you see a picture of it, it's like,
oh, you, oh, fuck you, what man?
Like that's how this ship looks.
So in order to operate this beast,
the ship had a huge crew made up of 306 people.
It was used for all sorts of things,
but on this particular voyage,
the Cyclops was carrying 11,000 tons of man,
it was like carrying man in the knees,
mag in the knees. It was carrying man, guanese 11,000 tons of
his chemical element that was used to make steel at the time.
So it's like the silvery metal. It's on the ship. And then
there's a lot of it. So on March 4, 1918, the cyclops sent
out a message back to their home base saying, whether fair,
all is well. Now this would be the
last time anyone would ever hear from the USS Cyclops. The hundreds of people on board
vanished along with the ship without so much as an SOS signal. Now just baffled the Navy. What
happened? You know, they ended up searching for months. And on June 1, 1918, the Cyclops was declared lost, and the crew officially
deceased. Not a single shred of evidence from the rep could be found. I mean, there's not a shred
of the chemical, nothing from the ship, nothing. Just... once again. And in article about the
disappearance, it was said, quote, she just disappeared as though some gigantic sea monster of the sea had grabbed her,
men and all, and sent her into the depths of the ocean."
End quote.
It's still the deadliest unsolved mystery in the history of the Navy.
Bermuda strikes again.
After decades of mysterious disappearances,
a magazine finally gives us creepy area,
the official name, which is the deadly Bermuda Triangle.
Now, there are no official boundaries of this triangle,
but if you look at a map, you'll see it goes
from the tip of Florida to Puerto Rico to Bermuda
and then back to Florida.
It's a huge area of the North Atlantic Ocean,
about 500,000 square miles,
or like two times the size of Texas, a big ol' triangle.
To make things even spicier, the Bermuda triangles
smack in the middle of something called Hurricane Alley,
which, as you may have been able to guess,
is a very stormy area. It said that the
waters can get very choppy, huge waves will come out of nowhere, and it's just overall
extremely dangerous. You're not going fishing in the Bermuda Triangle is what we're
getting at. One of the first theories is fun and has to do with something we already
covered. Some people think that the Bermuda Triangle is actually the location
of the lost city of Atlantis. Which if you think about it, it kind of actually makes sense.
Has anyone looked into this? They think that the people of Atlantis maybe had some like powerful
crystals that were filled with tons of energy, like batteries, along those lines.
Anyways, they think these crystals may have had the power to pull any ships or planes
that cross over them all the way to the very bottom of the ocean.
There's another theory, if you don't like that one.
As always, America comes through with the aliens, not even America.
People come through with the alien theory.
I mean, again, when in doubt, you got to point the finger at somebody.
Aliens, you can't prove that it isn't aliens. And when there's no woman to blame, you gotta look to the little green map. And some people believe that aliens are using the Bermuda Triangle as a portal into our world.
Kind of like a black hole in the ocean. They believe the lights Christopher Columbus saw in 1492 was a clear
sign that this portal was real.
Yeah, for sure.
So it's believed that these aliens are like capturing humans and ships and planes into
the Bermuda Triangle, take them to the alien portal, and then bring them up to their alien
spaceship for research.
Yeah, that sounds legit.
I mean, it explains how a bunch of ships, planes, and people go missing without a trace.
Aliens.
You know?
Sure, I don't like that theory.
I think that one's a little boring.
The next theory.
And probably the most scientific compasses.
Compasses.
Oh yeah, comp, we're gonna talk compasses.
Compasses with the only thing people
had to navigate the ocean at the time.
Now get this.
compasses, if you don't know, work based on the magnetic pole of the earth.
And whatever freaky power is beneath the surface of the brunette triangle is messing with
it.
It's throwing people way off their course.
Some people think the high iron content that's left over from a volcano in the area is
what throws this magnet at field off.
No matter what the real issue is, people to this day can't rely on their compasses or
other tools for navigation in Bermuda.
All of the machines start malfunctioning.
Where am I?
My comp asks us no longer working.
To further expand on that, there's a, but there's actually videos you can see on YouTube
where people go to the Bermuda Triangle
with an old school compass
and you'll see the compass spinning around
and around and around.
Like, there's something going on like a magnet.
And not only that, the waters in the area
were known to have rogue waves,
which are essentially massive waves
that come out of nowhere
and could reach up to 100 feet high
and just wipe ships out.
So the theory is that these waves were powerful enough
to destroy all evidence of a ship or airplane,
but like there's nothing to prove
that this was the case for the USS Cyclops
or the guys on Mission Flight 19.
Plus if it was a powerful wave,
they would be like, you know, debris.
It would end up somewhere.
Ah, anyways, look, all of these are theories, and nothing is proven.
Nobody knows exactly what is going on there, but what we do know is that the Bermuda Triangle
continues to drag victims to their watery grave to this very day.
Oh yeah, more than 50 ships and 20 airplanes have mysteriously disappeared leading to hundreds
of people just vanishing.
Except for Christopher Columbus though, he made it through for some reason.
Come on Burmese, we were rooting for you, we were all rooting for you.
You could have gobbled him right up.
To this day, an average of four planes and 20 ships are said to vanish in the zone every year,
leaving no trace behind. Not a boot, not a body, not a piece of wood,
and even a button, nothing poof.
God, theof, God.
The theory, my theory.
The Bermuda triangle has some kind of weird magnetic pool
going on underneath of it, right?
And it's sucking down all these ships and stuff
because it makes sense.
Just go with me, visualize, you're with me.
Great.
So the USS Cyclops was carrying a bunch of that chemical compound,
which maybe the magnet was super
attracted to, and they had so much of it that it sucked, it sucked the thing right down.
There was so much of it on the ship, pretty powerful magnet, that's my theory.
It's just a magnet.
There's something going on down there, it sucked everything up.
And if we could just get down there, I'm sure we could find what's going on, but for
some reason nobody wants to go like scuba over there. I'm sure we could find what's going on, but for some reason nobody wants to go like
scuba over there.
I'll do it.
Never hear from you again.
At least I'll have the answers.
Anyhow, so the ocean is badass and it demands to be respected, just like corn.
Oh, okay, so this part always bothers me because it's like, why are our nipples so hard
for going to outer space?
And like going to Mars and going to other planets and stuff when there are literally
terrifying mysteries, and things that we haven't even seen as humans right here on Earth,
maybe just lurking in the bottomless abyss of our ocean waiting to be discovered. But instead,
you guys want to go to like Mars, boo. Well, everyone, thank you so much for hanging out and learning with me
today. Remember, don't be afraid to ask questions to get the whole story because you do deserve that,
don't you? Stay curious, it's good for your noggin. I'd love to hear your reactions to this story,
so make sure to use the hashtag dark history over on social media so I can follow along.
Join me over on my YouTube where you can watch these episodes on Thursday after the podcast airs.
And while you're there,
don't forget to check out Murder Mystery and Makeup.
Yippie-kai-yay.
I hope you have a wonderful rest of your day.
You make good choices, please.
Don't go fishing out in the Bermuda
and I'll be talking to you next week.
Goodbye.
This podcast is executive produced by Bailey Sarian, Kimberly Jacobs,
Junior McNeely from Three Arts, Kevin Grush, and Claire Turner from Made in Network.
Writers, Katie Burris, Allison Filoboz, Joey Skuluso, and me, Bailey Sarian.
Shot and edited by Tafad Slaw, Nemaroundway, and Hannah Bacher.
Research provided by Ashley Spurgeon.
Big thank you for our special expert Zeus,
Ronda Rapplaas, and I'm your host to go to bed.
Okay.