The Discovery Channel is running "Dive to the Bermuda Triangle" right now. Initially I was not going to watch but a friend called me 20 minutes in and reported that the program was more rational than could have been hoped for.
The tag line for each commercial break says "...using science to explain the mystery of the BT" (paraphrasing). Fine, I thought... as long as they're using science, I'll watch.
I was somewhat disappointed not to hear TDC simply come right out and say that not all of the alleged reports actually happened in the BT, or to point out that this is a very high traffic area with frequent bad weather, strong gulf currents and lots of amateur flights to and from Bimini and therefore we should epxect a somewhat higher than average number of distress situations. But I didn't hear any of that unless it was in the first 20 minutes that I missed.
Then TDC presented something I'd never heard before. The methane bubble theory. Apparently there is a huge pocket of natural gas beneath the ocean floor that bubbles up through the water. Occasional mega-bubbles could be to blame for capsizing ships. A clip of a torpedo being set off hundreds of feet below a large scrap navy ship clearly shows the massive bubble lifting the hull so violently that the entire craft snaps into two. Even a medium sized bubble can apparently send a ship tossing to and fro, causing it to take on large amount of water.
As for the aircraft, apparently the high concentration of methane in the air causes engines to stall and altimiters to go all stupid, showing an altitude increase when in fact the plane's altitude is decreasing. An amateur or inexperienced pilot could easily crash his plane when trying to correct for the apparent unexplained altitude increase, when in fact his plane was already dangerously close to sea level.
It also seems that an airplane's piston engine can stall when it flies through a pocket of methane gas.
Overall I was pleased to see TDC attribute many/most of the BT incidents not to UFOs, sea monsters, mystery rays from space or wormholes, but to simple human error. But the methane gas is a new wrinkle. Maybe Flim-Flam! needs to be updated
Thoughts?
The tag line for each commercial break says "...using science to explain the mystery of the BT" (paraphrasing). Fine, I thought... as long as they're using science, I'll watch.
I was somewhat disappointed not to hear TDC simply come right out and say that not all of the alleged reports actually happened in the BT, or to point out that this is a very high traffic area with frequent bad weather, strong gulf currents and lots of amateur flights to and from Bimini and therefore we should epxect a somewhat higher than average number of distress situations. But I didn't hear any of that unless it was in the first 20 minutes that I missed.
Then TDC presented something I'd never heard before. The methane bubble theory. Apparently there is a huge pocket of natural gas beneath the ocean floor that bubbles up through the water. Occasional mega-bubbles could be to blame for capsizing ships. A clip of a torpedo being set off hundreds of feet below a large scrap navy ship clearly shows the massive bubble lifting the hull so violently that the entire craft snaps into two. Even a medium sized bubble can apparently send a ship tossing to and fro, causing it to take on large amount of water.
As for the aircraft, apparently the high concentration of methane in the air causes engines to stall and altimiters to go all stupid, showing an altitude increase when in fact the plane's altitude is decreasing. An amateur or inexperienced pilot could easily crash his plane when trying to correct for the apparent unexplained altitude increase, when in fact his plane was already dangerously close to sea level.
It also seems that an airplane's piston engine can stall when it flies through a pocket of methane gas.
Overall I was pleased to see TDC attribute many/most of the BT incidents not to UFOs, sea monsters, mystery rays from space or wormholes, but to simple human error. But the methane gas is a new wrinkle. Maybe Flim-Flam! needs to be updated
Thoughts?