S.S. Marine Sulphur Queen
There are many disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle, but instead of listing every single one, we narrowed it down to only three. First there is the S.S. Marine Sulphur Queen. The ship carried 15,000 pounds of hot sulfur in heated tanks to take to the mainland. The captain radioed in to tell there position, but three days after they radioed in the ship was never seen again. All that was left was a life jacket in the water.
Mary Celeste
The next well known disappearance is the Mary Celeste. The ship was on its way to Genoa, Italy, then less than a month later, the ship was spotted by a British ship called Dei Gratia. When passing by, there was no sign of the passengers and captain on board, yet the ship was still floating with 6 months worth of food and only 1 lifeboat missing.
The last disappearance we have is Flight DC-3. Flight DC-3 was heading to Miami, Florida coming from San Juan, Puerto Rico, when only 50 miles off of South Florida, it's last known message was sent about their position. After that, the aircraft and its 28 passengers and 3 crew members were never to be seen or heard from again.
British-Norman Islander
The most recent disappearance in the Bermuda Triangle was in 2008, and after the situations and missing ships and planes seem to just come to an end. Before the final event, a lot of unexplained occurrences happened every year in the area. On December 15, 2008 a British-Norman Islander took off from Santiago for New York with 11 people on board. Only 35 minutes after takeoff the airplane went off the radar. A huge search operation was started by the US Coast Guard but the airplane was never seen again. The plane went missing around the West Caicos island.
Witchcraft
Witchcraft was a 23-foot luxury cabin cruiser, owned by someone who also had a popular hotel. He invited his father onto his boat to see the Christmas lights along the shore of Miami at night. They did not even go a mile offshore. At 9 p.m. the coast guard got a call from the boat, who said they hit something, but it wasn’t an emergency they just required towing. They also said he would fire a flare to identify his position. The coast guard arrived to the location less than 20 minutes later but the ship was nowhere to be found and no flare was to be seen. A 1,200 square mile search was issued but nothing was ever found. These are only some of the mysterious disappearances of the Bermuda Triangle.