> > > > I wonder if the Bermuda Triangle is directly opposite on the other side of the > > > globe. > > > > > > > > > > > > . > > > > > > It is, actually... over there it's the Burmese Thai-angle > > > > Damn you! Now I have to do mapth! > > > > > > Miami: 25° N, 80° W > > San Juan: 18° N, 66° W > > Bermuda: 32° N, 64° W > > > > 180-80=100: 25° S, 100° E > > 180-66=114: 18° S, 114° E > > 180-64=116: 32° S, 116° E > > > > Now the other part. This a point-to-point translation through the center of the > > planet, not a hole cut through it (The BERMUDA point lands in Perth, right in the > > middle of a park): > > > I get the math/numbers of the locations... But I guess I can't get why it wouldn't be > flipped and mirrored since it's going through > the center of the Earth (like how an image would also be flipped and mirrored when > looked at through a lens). But anyway....
By the time you looked at it, my post had been modified somewhat from the original content; the triangle IS mirrored, north to south, with the southernmost point, Perth, reflecting the northernmost point of the Bermuda Triangle (Bermuda, not San Juan). The east-west relationship flips, too, but then you rotate the globe 180 degrees, turning it around again. If you could look at it through the planet it would be flipped east-west.
That image you posted, where the east-west orientation of the southern triangles is the reverse of the northern ones, would represent an enormous triangular rod shoved through the planet. Cutting a triangle-shaped hole through an apple would produce something like that; in that case the northern point would still correlate to the northern point.
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