Larry Kusche was a librarian at Arizona State University when he wrote the book The Bermuda Triangle Mystery-solved (1975). In the book, Kusche researches the different disappearances that occurred in the Bermuda Triangle to decide what truly caused them. After his research, he came to the conclusion that the Bermuda Triangle is not unique and that it is just a manufactured mystery.
Larry Kusche's Theory:
- The amount of aircrafts and ships lost in the Bermuda Triangle were not proportionately different than any other part of the Ocean. The Bermuda Triangle is hardly unique.
- The disappearances that remain unsolved are which no information can be found. In some cases, important information about the incident and sometimes even the entire incident is completely fictional.
- Many incidents weren't considered mysterious when they occurred. They became mysterious many years later after writers sought out reports of additional incidents in the Bermuda Triangle.
- Contrary to Legend, in many incidents the weather was bad when they occurred. Many writers failed to mention this and represented disappearances to have happened in calm weather conditions. Some meteorological reports of when the disappearances happened clearly contradicted this.
- Many writers did not do their own research but rephrased articles of previous writers, which repeated the errors and inaccuracies of earlier accounts.
- In many cases, writers withheld information that provided an obvious solution to the disappearance.