
The Boys Chat Podcast
Welcome to The Boys Chat, a show where we discuss a wide range of topics from everyday life to history and culture. Join us as we share our thoughts, experiences, and opinions on everything from technology, food, family traditions, and world events. With each episode, we explore different themes and dive deep into our personal stories and perspectives, while also seeking to learn from each other and our listeners. We aim to create a fun, informative, and engaging space where everyone is welcome to participate and share their ideas. So whether you're a fan of casual conversations or curious about diverse perspectives, tune in and join the discussion.
The Boys Chat Podcast
Unlocking the Secrets of Roanoke, Nazca Lines, and the Bermuda Triangle -- The Boys Chat #37
Ready for a thrilling walk through the annals of history's great mysteries? Prepare to dive into the chilling tale of the Lost Colony of Roanoke, one of the 16th century's most compelling enigmas. Ponder with us as we unfold the myriad theories behind the colonists' mysterious disappearance that still stirs imaginations. We'll also take you on a cinematic journey and draw fascinating parallels with the iconic film 'Dances with Wolves'.
But the intrigue doesn't stop there. We're off to Peru's Nazca Desert, renowned for its enigmatic geoglyphs that have puzzled scholars for centuries. Unravel the mystery of how the Nazca people managed to create these massive lines and images without modern technology's aid. Our final destination? The infamous Bermuda Triangle, a region steeped in tales of unexplained disappearances of ships, aircraft and people. Join us as we navigate through the numerous theories, from magnetic anomalies to paranormal activities, that attempt to explain these eerie incidents. Get ready to have your curiosity piqued and your thirst for mystery quenched. Don't miss it!
Anyways, welcome back guys. We're back with a boys chat. We've got Tanner and Colby here with you again. And yeah, I still like to excuse the other guys, Matt and Darren. They're still out doing their thing in New Mexico. I'm not sure when they're getting back.
Speaker 2:I have no idea. I mean, I would assume it's going to be in the next couple of weeks or so, but Right, because, let's see, school starts college. The week of the 14th or so. It's like the second week, or is it the next week? It might be the next week.
Speaker 1:I think it's the next week because I think the schools, the local schools, are then. So I think the college is the following so sometime in August, yeah. So they'll be back Eventually. Eventually, we'll say September maybe. Yeah, we'll just go with that. Maybe Common if you miss them, common if you don't.
Speaker 2:Let us know anything you got for us so.
Speaker 1:Let's jump right into today's topic. I'm a stutterer. Today's topic is ancient mysteries. Name one off the top of your head, go.
Speaker 2:I don't know. I'm not good with this type of stuff. No, it's not real history. I don't know.
Speaker 1:Some of it is like the lost colony of Roanoke.
Speaker 2:Never heard of it.
Speaker 1:You've never heard of them, nope. So when I was doing some research on this, I remember hearing about the lost colony of Roanoke, it was one of the original colonies back in the day of America America Right, it was before. I believe it was the first one, but it disappeared. No one knows what happened to it. So this guy, let's see, it was 1587. It was when they established it, so a long long time ago before really, the 13 colonies were kind of like a thing.
Speaker 2:That was well before that and it's probably right around the time of like Jamestown, I think it was right before Jamestown, because this was in North Carolina.
Speaker 1:On Roanoke Island the first governor was John White and after they settled in 1857, he went back to England for supplies and help and just to kind of start building a new world Right, and there was about 115 colonists that were still there and a lot of it was his family, his kids, grandkids, you know and what have you. And he gets back to England and there was the Anglo-Spanish war that was kind of causing some complications with travel and whatnot during that time period, and so he didn't get back to Roanoke for three years and when he gets back it's empty. There's nothing.
Speaker 2:Did he like try and find anybody, like search beyond, like the island, or like look around and everything?
Speaker 1:was deserted. There was nothing at all, no trace of people and whatnot, but the only clues were the words Crochin, I think, c-r-o-a-t-o-a-n. Something like that Crote, crote tawn. I'm butchering this so we'll just and then also the word cro-etch into a nearby post. It's led to a lot of speculations behind what happened to these colonists. Nobody still knows. There are a couple theories behind. I'm gonna see if you. What would you think If you were John?
Speaker 2:I would, I would see you roll up the Indians or, excuse me, the Native Americans would attack them or something like just as anything would like that back then, like, or there was some indigenous people on that island and after he left and they witnesses they probably just tried to take it over and take back their land and take back their lifestyle. I guess maybe I that's probably my best bet or I don't know, some Bigfoot or something ate them all or something, right?
Speaker 1:I mean, that's pretty much what all the speculatory people are thinking and that's what all the theories lead to, is, the natives got mad and what have you? Either they came through and wiped them out or took them prisoners, made them slaves, or what have you? Yeah.
Speaker 2:Excuse me, you're excused, thank you.
Speaker 1:But yeah, they were thinking that, like the word that was carved into the posts refers to that particular Native American tribe. Again, I can't, I don't know how to say it.
Speaker 2:It's we're too white for that.
Speaker 1:You see it, you see it right there, all caps.
Speaker 2:Crotone, crotone, crotone, crotone, maybe Crotone. Yeah, somebody can correct us if we're wrong. I mean, we're no experts.
Speaker 1:No, we're not. But yeah, some historians believe they may have assimilated into the native communities and become part of the societies, because they're new to the world or they're new to the land, and so the harsh climate. They don't know how to find food and what not. So maybe you know, if you can't, you know can't beat them, join them or whatever it is.
Speaker 2:Yeah, well, it's like that one Kevin Costner movie dancing dances with the wolves. Have you seen that one? I haven't seen it, but I've heard of it. Yeah, so it's basically Kevin Costner's this army captain or lieutenant or something and he has to go out to a post in like Wyoming or something. This is in 1800s, brings Civil War and stuff, and he's trying to make relations with the Native Americans out there to try to help establish the US further west. And basically what happens is the US Army doesn't hear from him for years and then they show back up to the fort where he's supposed to be and he's not there. And what happens is Kevin Costner joins the Native Americans and basically becomes part of their tribe. Okay, the Chiefs daughter chiefs, daughter princess of the tribe or whatever. Whatever you want to call her, whatever it is the Pocahontas.
Speaker 1:Yeah, from the Disney film. Yeah, what or what have you, whatever the equivalent?
Speaker 2:that marries her and kind of is Having a life with her, and he sees that they're coming back and he goes to try and stop the army from Rowing their life and stuff, but it's a really good movie.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it's way cool, but yeah. So Runnings with the natives is kind of what caused the colonists to disappear, whether or not they Joined them. They were killed by them, they were enslaved by them, what you know? Taken prisoner by them.
Speaker 2:I mean you look at any of the other civilizations of what happened, like what happened at Jamestown or what it like. Whatever it was Like, there's always stuff that was going on with that, so right, I mean, I think it's somewhat justified, depending on. How you look at it. Yeah, your point of view is different.
Speaker 1:Oh right, some other things were maybe natural disasters, because being in North Carolina you know you got hurricanes and whatnot right that are hitting in. So maybe that, maybe they got blown away, yeah.
Speaker 2:I don't know they get tsunamis that? I don't think so.
Speaker 1:I don't think. I don't think I'm tropical. Yeah, that's more like a Pacific Ocean Terror rather than Atlantic.
Speaker 2:Yeah, she don't really get hurricanes in the Pacific Ocean, I guess either.
Speaker 1:Not really. Yeah, it's more in the Gulf and Inlets east coast yeah which is weird. I wonder why that is. It's got to be something?
Speaker 2:is it temperature? Temperature with the water and the air, how everything I mean you look at like tornadoes, like we don't have tornadoes out here in the West one because of geography and stuff.
Speaker 1:Right, there's nothing.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but like we can still get like dirt devils or dust devils, whatever. Like those are small tornadoes, but I'm sure it's like a flash flood. Yeah, now the question for you is are how many oceans are there, or is it one big ocean? Hmm, my, my, my opinion on this is it's one big body of water, but each section is a different name. Like, right, technically it's different sections of it, like it's broken off, but it is still all connected.
Speaker 1:Oh yeah, it is all connected. Can you name all the oceans? Atlantic Pacific looks like a gun, my butt.
Speaker 2:I Honestly probably can't name any more than those I know Probably won't you name them. I'm gonna be like, oh yeah, let's see.
Speaker 1:So there's the Atlantic the Pacific, the Arctic, the Indian and the Antarctic.
Speaker 2:There's five. I think there's only five, because there's seven continents, right?
Speaker 1:You're in this five, five, five oceans, but then there's seven seas.
Speaker 2:Oh, I honestly don't know.
Speaker 1:Somebody can fact check us on that one, because we're no.
Speaker 2:I honestly couldn't guess, sit here and guess at all on that one.
Speaker 1:Right, Right, and then other things disease, outbreak, famine and desperation have led them to run away or go wild, I guess. Yeah, Donner party, but I mean, it's still. The whole idea of the lost colony of Roanoke is still up for debate today. There's no solid facts on what happened to them and I don't think you can. It's been so many years, it's been 500 years almost. I don't think there's really anything that they can there's probably not a lot of evidence like that. There's no footprints, or I mean fingerprints.
Speaker 2:I guess Maybe there's something like you have like dinosaur tracks. So if maybe there's something that's like petrified or something that you could find of, or there's good documentation in journals or something like that, Right, I can maybe some hieroglyphs somewhere. Something.
Speaker 1:Yeah, we might never know what happened to the lost colony of Roanoke, and that's okay with me.
Speaker 2:I'm fine with that.
Speaker 1:Nope, nnp not my problem, yeah All right, moving on to the next one, the Nazca lines.
Speaker 2:Oh, the. Do you know? Do you know what these are? The big like from Indiana Jones, the big lines and the. Are those something different?
Speaker 1:I think I know what you're talking about. I want to say yes.
Speaker 2:They're like in South American. You can only like see them from the sky. Yeah, yes, yes, yes, same thing.
Speaker 1:So the yeah, it's. Mysterious geoglyphs found in the Nazca desert of Peru. Yeah so yeah, which Indiana Jones is that?
Speaker 2:Is that Crystal Skull? Okay, that's what I was saying yesterday. That's the reason.
Speaker 1:I know you seen the new one yet. No, I want to. I didn't see it either, but I heard it's got really bad reviews.
Speaker 2:I'm not surprised. I want to go see freaking Oppenheimer. Oh yeah, Dude that one. That one has good reviews.
Speaker 1:It's got better reviews than Barbie. Oh, of course it does.
Speaker 2:Have you seen those things on Tik Tok where it's um?
Speaker 1:Barbenheimer.
Speaker 2:Yeah Well, it's the map of like. It has a scale of if it's more towards five than more people in your state favor Oppenheimer and if it's the other way it's Barbie. If, like you look at it, it's hilarious. Utah was Oppenheimer, oh yeah, and it was shocking, like Texas was like Barbie and like Nevada was Barbie and I was like well, that's a little bigger cities.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's probably more what it is. Well, yeah, I mean they did the Trinity test out this way.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 1:In the desert Because I know they did. They did nuclear testing out past Santa Clara.
Speaker 2:Yeah, they did a lot of stuff out here in New Mexico, utah, nevada, arizona, maybe Arizona a little bit. I mean, there's a atomic museum in Las Vegas you can go see and it has a lot of history behind it and actually talks about a lot of what happened in Utah, mostly about, like, the disease, like radiation poisoning and stuff that happened from that Right.
Speaker 1:Anyways, back to Peru, let's see. So yeah, these giant geoglyphs, oh my gosh, let's see. They were created by the Naska people, who lived in the region between 500 BCE, bc and 500 AD, so over a thousand year period and the Naska culture was known for their advanced knowledge and engineering and agriculture. And, if I'm assuming it's the same people in that Indiana Jones film and from that it seems likely of what they were.
Speaker 2:Joe Rogan talked about on his podcast. I don't even know how long ago it was, but there were some protesters that went down there and were protesting. It was a big while or something. Who knows what they were protesting. They were basically had these giant tarp signs that they were trying to hold down. They were moving the rocks that the geoglyphs were written in and stuff and covering it up, so they were basically ruining it.
Speaker 1:That doesn't make any sense to me. I'm sure you have your own opinions on that. Let's not open that box. I wasn't going to go. Another time for sure, another time for sure.
Speaker 2:But just not today. I mean, opinions are like armpits. I'll do the PG version of this.
Speaker 1:Opinions are like armpits.
Speaker 2:Everybody has them, they all sting.
Speaker 1:So, anyways, these lines cover an area of nearly a thousand square kilometers. I don't know what that is. Have you ever heard of a kilometer? I have no idea, neither do I?
Speaker 2:What's that? What's that in Eagles per Eagles per freedom? Yeah, you know, I'm not sure mark.
Speaker 1:But anyways, they you know they're a bunch of different shapes from straight lines, geometric patterns and images of animals, birds and humans.
Speaker 2:So that's kind of cool, and those are pretty cool.
Speaker 1:Nobody knows what they are, though Some theories suggest that they had astronomical, religious or ceremonial significance, while others think it was just irrigation and water management systems, which doesn't make any sense on. Why would it be a?
Speaker 2:perfectation yeah.
Speaker 1:You know that has to be thinking about it right, because you can only see it from the sky.
Speaker 2:Yeah Well, and it's like crazy how they can get it that perfect without actually being able to see the pyramids. And they had to like, see the stuff, like from the sky and be like oh, this is how this is supposed to look from up there, and not be able to like go play and then go oh, we need to move this this way, so it looks better.
Speaker 1:No, like they did it by planning out and what have you or was aliens? I'm going with aliens, you know it could be back then they have some advanced technology that we don't know about, that there's no traces of, for whatever reason just like the pyramids yeah.
Speaker 1:The pyramids are way too precise to be yeah, but crazy. But anyways, you know it's like, if you think about it in, you know the way distant future it's like, and humanity just kind of poops out. And then you get the new set of humans or whatever, and they go to Dubai. They see all these manmade islands that look funny. They're going to be doing the same thing. We're doing like, yeah, well, what was it?
Speaker 1:It was for irrigation or yeah, it was a worship thing and you know you got like a palm tree island or whatever it is and it's like I wonder what it was for. Yeah, you know they're going to be asking the same question.
Speaker 2:You know how far we've hate to say fallen, but how far we've fallen from these great accomplishments to like, ok, what cool has been built, what, anything? What has anything cool been built in the last 10 years? I mean 10 years, yeah, I mean like there's nothing like, granted, like One of the big tallest buildings in the world's in Dubai right, the Burj Khalifa.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it is the tallest building in the world, actually yeah, the tallest building.
Speaker 2:I mean there's nothing that really rivals that or competes with it that anybody's building or trying to beat like At least that I know of before that was like, the Eiffel Tower was like yeah, and the air is really not even that big. I.
Speaker 1:Mean the compared to the one in Vegas. So, but it's a little bit bigger. It's all about perception, man.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, it's way hit. Get a look at it, man. Yeah, come on dude, you know what they say about big feet Tanner.
Speaker 1:Yeah, big shoes Anyhoo, anyhoo. But yeah, people just don't know how they did it without modern technology and with you know the technology they supposedly had at the time and the tools and whatnot. It's just kind of remarkable how they Created these lines and whatnot. But let's see. So some other theories, or it was an astronomical calendar. It's the kind of a prevailing theory that suggests the, the lines function as a calendar observatory, helping the people track celestial events like solstice, sol, solstices, equinoxes and the movements of stars and planets.
Speaker 2:I would almost buy that over irrigation and stuff, just because, like you think about, like the mind calendar, that that's wild.
Speaker 1:My account but they said that we were gonna die in 2012. Yeah, but it's been 11 years.
Speaker 2:But there's theories that like maybe we're counting dates wrong and we had calculations different from what they were thinking, so it actually could be farther, or it was exactly right anyways, I'm not very scientific with that, that's not my area. So right, I'll stay in my lane.
Speaker 1:Thank you. Ritual and ceremonial sites, for I Don't even know I mean.
Speaker 2:Ancient cultures are interesting, and what they how they worshiped and how they worshiped and did type that type of stuff and like how they come up with those things and yeah.
Speaker 1:Honor deities or ancestors. Maybe that's why, like the humanoid or certain animals Maybe it was there their deity was.
Speaker 2:Some animal, yeah, of some sort. It very good.
Speaker 1:That's a. That's a popular thing Because, like the Egyptians, some of their gods were They'd worship in the form of an animal right. The Native Americans with the Greek wolf spirit, or that was rude. Or Like the Thunderbird we talked about a couple weeks ago you know the same idea, you know just animals.
Speaker 1:Yeah but yeah, I met you know it sends messages to the gods that hey, look at us, we can move rocks or Something. Or it could be just for art yeah, is what they are. Or yeah, alien involvement for ET man, whatever so.
Speaker 2:But other than that, like Irrigation seems pretty far-fetched that one out of all the ones that we kind of talked about, that one's like the bottom of the list of Makes any sense. The way that they're shaped everything else at least can has some merit. Yeah, I.
Speaker 1:See it almost more like a story.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I could see like the art, the art thing, or something for worship and it could be like Glyphs and like a cave or whatever, like it could just be. Very well, this be that of this is our history and this is how we're telling it is this way right, but who knows?
Speaker 1:all right, let's do, let's do, let's do this next one. All right, so this next one. Personally, I see this one is the most popular. Mm-hmm that I know the most not the most about, but I've heard the most outside of like school, and it's the Bermuda triangle.
Speaker 2:Mm-hmm, freaky stuff has happened. Uh-huh very freaky stuff.
Speaker 1:So it's also known as the Devil's triangle, and it's the western part of the North Atlantic Ocean, so it's roughly bounded by Miami Bermuda you Bermuda. Bermuda and Puerto Rico, forming a triangular region.
Speaker 2:Mm-hmm.
Speaker 1:And it's you know, it's a big talk because of all the disappearances between ships, aircraft, boats and People over the years.
Speaker 2:Well, I saw a thing the other day I think it was a documentary about like finding Amelia Earhart, oh yeah, and like it was like pretty convincing like she like survived her crash or whatever when she went down the triangle and was like living on an island or something like there's like compelling evidence of photos of her and her navigator on An island that it's like oh, that's got to be her, and him like right.
Speaker 1:That's where they I mean the same thing with like Elvis in Cuba, and yeah. Hitler in Argentina. Yeah, who knows? You know you got your doppelganger's all over the place, right, so but Anyways, yeah, the first high-profile disappearance occurred in 1945, when flight 19 a group of five US Navy TBM Avenger torpedo bombers vanished during a training mission. Then after that everyone's gone, ever, I mean wait a minute when was Amelia Earhart? That was it after World War two.
Speaker 2:I have no idea. Actually, I don't know the timeline of that I.
Speaker 1:Feel like I should know. I feel like I should know I'm trying to think of not at the museum to battle the Smithsonian when Amy Adams plays her and the plane that they hop in. I Can't tell if it's like an older plane, like from the 20s. I feel like it was around the 40s towards the 50s, but I don't want to say that wrong. Later I purse. I feel like July 2nd 1937 okay, that's, yeah, that sounds right, yeah, okay, so pre-World War one World.
Speaker 2:War two. I apologize, I was like hold on Tanner, that's.
Speaker 1:Close. I know my. I know my dates. I know my dates.
Speaker 2:Yes, that was just before.
Speaker 1:World War two. That's the first high-profile Disappearance not the US Navy.
Speaker 2:Navy just wants to take credit for it shout out to the Navy, though. Navy was probably the one that shot her down, so they could have that I respect them Anyways.
Speaker 1:So various theories have been proposed to explain the disappearances, including magnetic anomalies and Anomalies and an anemone, amen, amen. Paranormal activity, methane Hydrates and navigational errors.
Speaker 2:I almost wondered like with it too is like you get into that area and the way it's set up, is the poles get flipped or something, because you're close enough to the equator and it like screws with your compasses and like we're not that close to the equator.
Speaker 1:The equator drops down into South America and and Miami is pretty far from, I guess, in.
Speaker 2:Puerto Rico Throwing it right there.
Speaker 1:I guess you're getting closer to the equator, but it's just the one region, though. Yeah, it's as soon as you hit those that triangle.
Speaker 1:I guess that's right and there could be something with the tides or Right Mars being in Scorpio or something whatever Astronomical phenomenon every time I hear permit a triangle, I think of the sweet life on deck mm-hmm when they go into the Bermuda triangle and I like Switches everything around or something like that, because it was a Zack and Cody's birthday, mm-hmm and when they you know whatever blow their candles out or make a wish, whatever, they hit the triangle, so like they flip lives or something goes crazy, and then they have to do it again and they come out, and Then the same thing happens with the international date line in the same show. You know, when they cross that a lightning strikes the boat. So they're living the same day over and over again, like Groundhog Day. Groundhog Day, like that Concept doesn't been used over and over and over again.
Speaker 1:My goodness, we got to get more creative with her Seasons. We're running out of ideas. Yeah, why do you think there's a straight right now? It's not. For that reason they don't pay them enough, because they're not creative. I'm sorry. Anyways, I don't know what I'm talking about.
Speaker 2:Or do I? Do we ever know what we're talking about?
Speaker 1:Yeah, yeah, we want to sound smart sometimes what do you think I'm reading off my notes yeah, we took good notes Makes it seem like I'm not just blurting stuff out, I'm actually reading. I'm learning along with you and the viewers.
Speaker 2:I'm blurting things out out that come out of my mind. So Yep, no filter, no filter. Oh, there is a filter, tanner, trust me.
Speaker 1:There's a filter Good um, but anyways, many Disappearances are attributed to natural natural factors like unpredictable weather, human error and the vastness of the ocean, and that makes rescue missions challenging, because If they go down and your equipment goes out, then there's a good luck.
Speaker 2:Yeah, there's nothing you can really do and it kind of SOL at that point. Sure, out of luck, you sure are dude?
Speaker 1:Sure are we keep. We keep this podcast PG. I try to. Should we do a P? Should we do a PG 13 episode? Or I can say heck, we that?
Speaker 2:that might be a little much for darn and darn I mean and flip.
Speaker 1:I was gonna say something else, but thank you for keeping it PG, I was gonna say you can make it.
Speaker 2:No, we're not gonna go. Triple X, colby a.
Speaker 1:Anyways, despite myths and legends, the Bermuda Triangles not officially recognized by the US Navy or any other maritime Organization as exceptionally hazardous area. So, even though all these crazy coincidence coincidence has happened, it's not real, it's fake, just like area 51.
Speaker 2:Oh, I'm sure that's very fake. Indiana Jones proved that wrong too, yeah.
Speaker 1:You're on a kick, bro. Anyways, even though a lot of people have claimed that it's bad, it's been debunked as bad and most maritime and aviation authorities consider it no more dangerous than any other heavily traveled area of the ocean.
Speaker 2:Which there's probably some truth that everybody's always looking for a superstition Like Friday the 13th, everything goes bad, or a full moon. I mean full moon things real, though.
Speaker 1:Oh yeah, full moon happens. I'm not saying like werewolves will come out and bite your face off, but the weirdos all the weirdos come out. Some strange stuff happens, and that's just because the moon's closer or something, or whatever it's in a line, this is in.
Speaker 2:Yeah, this is in rising and your Taurus.
Speaker 1:Yeah, gives a such a Pisces thing.
Speaker 2:Gosh, gosh, colby. If anybody can guess what me and Tanner's signs are, I don't know that anybody. It's fake. It doesn't even matter. You're wrong anyway, alright I understand, bye, anyway.
Speaker 1:So let's see, yeah, but the badoo so, but yeah. So you know the maritime people. They're saying it's no more dangerous. There just happens to be a lot of incidents, coincidences with it. I think that's just people, like you know, talk that. It's one of those things where they don't talk about all the other across the ocean that happens in a similar spot.
Speaker 2:They're just hyperfix it on this one If you fly over Ukraine and Russia right now, you'll get shot down. Like that's not a coincidence. I mean, that's just stuff happening. It's probably Cuba. I'm going to blend Cuba on that one for the Bermuda Triangle. It's close enough. Blame them for shooting everything down and making it disappear. Cool, it's also the Russians.
Speaker 1:Yeah, let's just blame Eastern Asia.
Speaker 2:Yeah, go with that North.
Speaker 1:East Asia and Eastern Europe and just blame everybody except everyone else for our problems.
Speaker 2:Exactly that's the American way, maybe for the left.
Speaker 1:But yeah, but some other theories. You know the magnetic anomalies just with, for whatever reason, that part of the ocean is getting hit, funny with, the poles are getting flipped or something, and so the compasses start going every which way. Then they drive themselves into who knows what. Are the electricity, electric devices on board to kind of go haywire Right, that's when he does navigate with the stars. Come on, yeah, find the North Star man. Now we taught us how to do that. You stick your hand in the water, gosh, and then, if it's warm, you know someone's peeing on you.
Speaker 2:And that person's usually Tanner.
Speaker 1:Yeah, oh, this one's kind of interesting. So methane gas, which is what cow farts are made out of anyways, and it's bad for the environment, Supposedly greenhouse gases and warm in the earth and yeah, whatever. Anyways it's suggested that these methane gases are deposits under the ocean floor that could erupt and create massive bubbles, causing ships to lose buoyancy and sink rapidly. That makes sense. That's a valid reason. I could see that that makes sense and for whatever reason, in the Bermuda Triangle there's more cracks or whatever, so that doesn't explain airplanes or aircraft.
Speaker 2:That would explain ships. That would explain ships and maybe, like it's a combination of like when it comes up or whatever.
Speaker 1:And they don't have to be big bubbles too, because one of the disappearances was the USS Cyclops in 1918 and it was a Navy cargo ship and it disappeared with 306 crew members on board and it remains one of the largest losses of life in the Navy history. That wasn't directly involving combat, and so you know that's a big that's a lot of people. That's a massive cargo carrier, that's huge, you know, with a crew of over 300 people, so that that methane gas bubble would have to be massive.
Speaker 2:I mean, or it's just multiple like good size ones that there's multiple of them or it just.
Speaker 1:And I guess it just has to get it down just enough before water gets on top and it's gone.
Speaker 2:Boats from 1918 or whatever.
Speaker 1:That's true.
Speaker 2:Compared to like. I think we're both kind of thinking of like a US aircraft carrier.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it was probably like a big wood ship, pretty much, I mean. But still, though it's a 300 man crew. That's still a big ship. That's still got to be pretty big. Yeah, because they had ships like that in the first World War. That wasn't. It was hired to the Caribbean.
Speaker 2:No, it wasn't like a full on. Like wood sail, like you were starting to get into was really World. War two, when you got like the aircraft carriers and what we know today. I mean there was the early versions of those in World War Right, but right by digress.
Speaker 1:Anyways, the other things, weather conditions, whatever reason, something hits like crazy. Human error, I'm sure, is what they that's a big factor, what they rack everything up to is just oh yeah, they're just humans which they screwed up. And then you know, you got the paranormal, you got your aliens invading, you got your everything else. But that lacks scientific evidence, because aliens don't exist, according to the scientific community. Oh, and then this one's fun Time warps in Vortexes. So time travel, yeah, transport objects to other dimensions or times.
Speaker 2:Yeah, I don't buy that. That science doesn't math.
Speaker 1:Correct, because ice cream is blue when you bite into it, but red when you spit it out.
Speaker 2:Mm hmm, makes sense Exactly.
Speaker 1:But anyways, no one can explain why all these people have disappeared and then bremed a triangle. I think it's one of those coincidences. There's a couple other ones like coincidences.
Speaker 2:You let us know in the comments of what.
Speaker 1:Unless you go by Oogway, then there are no coincidences. I was going to do his accent, but that would come across really bad, probably would.
Speaker 2:I thought you were trying to say Uruguay when you said Uruguay. Like the country I was like where are you?
Speaker 1:Oogway, master, Oogway.
Speaker 2:It took me a minute to process what you said. I went oh wait, no he's talking about.
Speaker 1:Come on, kung Fu Panda, it's phenomenal. We had this debate once I won. This is true. Comment below which Kung Fu Panda is your favorite Try, don't try.
Speaker 2:Noodle it's quit.
Speaker 1:Oh, it's gone. Quit, don't quit, noodle.
Speaker 2:Quit Don't, quit Noodle.
Speaker 1:My time has come. So many memes in that movie.
Speaker 2:I know Just from him.
Speaker 1:But anyways, that's all I got for today. So comment below which theory is your favorite, and if you want us to cover any other theories, let us know and like subscribe. Click the bell. Thank you, and we will see you next time. Bye, Bye.