Disappearance that exceeds the close approximation of the Triangle should be considered part of the Triangle. Okay, but how far do these suggest until it extends? The coast of Mexico? The Caribbean sea? The coast of Brazil? The entire North Atlantic, perhaps! If that is the case, why even border with the Triangle to begin with?
I have piled a list of some disappearances said to be connected with Bermuda Triangle and if they are all to be included, I think we need a bigger Triangle. If anything, the true mystery about Bermuda Triangle is why people so adamantly insist upon it being mysterious. As far as I can tell, there is nothing unique to cause fright about this location as compared to the rest of the ocean.
The fundamental aspect of Bermuda triangle is that these incidents can somehow be correlated but each disappearance could not be more different. Some vanishment occurred in the storm. Some occurred when the sky is clear. Some occurred when the sea is turbulent. Some, the sea is calm. Some during the day, some during the night. Probable causes include mechanical failure, explosion, human errors, inexperience, piracy, mutiny, etc. Some airplanes and ships were brand new, some were many decades old. Some extremely large, some were tiny. In all this degree, wreckage can sometimes be recovered, other times it cannot. Distress signal can sometimes be received, sometime it cannot. It involves every type of vessels and every type of aircraft. The ships and airplanes can be travelling at any speed, at any direction, with any altitude, with any amount of passengers, at any time and for any reason.
Thank you @greenrun!