Disappearances. Theories. Obsession. Explore one of the most enduring mysteries of the modern world — and the folklore that grew around it.
Between Miami, Bermuda, and Puerto Rico lies a stretch of ocean that has swallowed ships and aircraft without explanation — or so the story goes. The Bermuda Triangle is one of the 20th century's most tenacious myths, born from real disappearances and extraordinary embellishment.
This exhibition traces the full arc of the Triangle's story: from the real losses of Flight 19 and the USS Cyclops, through the books and documentaries that turned incidents into legend, to the scientific explanations that followed — and why none quite killed the mystery.
The 1945 disappearance of five US Navy Avengers is the founding myth of the Triangle. Original flight logs, distress transcripts, and recovered equipment tell the story.
From methane hydrates and compass anomalies to time portals — an interactive room cataloguing every theory ever proposed, and the evidence for and against.
A curated archive of the books, articles, and television programmes that transformed a pattern of accidents into global legend.
A 542-foot US Navy cargo ship disappears with 309 crew — the largest non-combat loss in US Naval history. No wreckage was ever found.
Five Avenger bombers go missing on a training exercise. The rescue plane sent to find them also disappears. 27 men lost.
Vincent Gaddis coins the term "Bermuda Triangle" in Argosy magazine, giving the myth its identity.
Charles Berlitz's bestselling book sells millions of copies and cements the Triangle in popular culture.
Scientists propose hexagonal clouds generating 170mph "air bombs" as an explanation — though the debate continues.
The Bermuda Triangle is open daily, 10:00–17:00. Free entry — no booking required.
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