Amid the untouched beauty of Alaska's varying landscape, a mystery lingers. Because people seem to go missing at an eerily high rate, a large section of the state has come to be called Alaska'sBermuda Triangle. Planes go down, hikers go missing and Alaskan residents and tourists seem to vanish into the largely untouched backdrop.
The so-called Bermuda Triangle slices through four of the state's regions, from the southeastern wilderness and fjords to the interior tundra and up to the arctic mountain ranges. Its points include the large swath of land from Juneau and Yakutat in the southeast, the Barrow mountain range in the north, andAnchorage in the center of the state
In 1972, one of the more famous disappearances involved two members of the U.S. Congress, Speaker of the House Hale Boggs and Rep. Nick Begich. They, along with an aide, Russell Brown and the pilot, Don Jonz, were flying in a Cessna 310 from Anchorage to Juneau. Not long after take-off, all contact with the plane ceased. A massive air-sea search and rescue mission was launched. Some 400 aircraft, dozens of boats, including 12 Coast Guard ships, and even an Air Force SR-71 searched for the missing plane and men. After 39 days, the effort was called off. To this day, nobody knows what really happened?
There's a native ancient legends in Alaska. How several tribes believe in creatures like Bigfoot. One tribe accounted for their frequently vanishing members to an evil being called Kushtaka, who steals souls.They believed Kushtaka was a shape-shifting being who lures his victims before capturing them.There's also an alaskan man who has heard a strange buzzing sound at times. Could he have been hearing an energy vortex?
It was in the years between 1960 and 2005 that mysteries took place in Nome, Alaska. Nome is a very small town. During this time is when many disappearances and deaths took place. The FBI was involved in solving the mystery and they sent homicide detectives to investigate the disappearances. Many of the victims were natives to Nome. This mystery started to take place in 1960, where people began to vanish or die.
The facts of the unexplained disappearances are still disputed. Over the past 60 years, the FBI has made many visits to Nome. Nome is the most famous place in the state where it is known that people disappear. Many natives do not travel alone, especially at night. The investigations of the FBI cover a time between 1960 and 2005.
People have all sorts of explanations they believe and some of these explanations include paranormal activity, UFOs, alien abductions and electromagnetic fields.UFO or not, Something sinister did going on in alaska.The people disappearances into a thin air without a trace in alaska are still an unsolved mystery today. Will these disappearances ever be solved with concrete evidence or will they remain a mystery forever? Are the investigations still ongoing or are the cases closed? There are still many unanswered questions that people would love to learn the truth.
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