1) Fleetwood Mac's "Bermuda Triangle" (1974)

From Heroes are Hard to Find, the band's ninth album and its last before the line-up change (two words: Nicks, Buckingham) that would launch the group into superstardom. This slinky track's lyrics stop just short of "Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald"-eque literalism, but they come pretty close:

"I guess you've heard about the Bermuda Triangle/There's something going on/Nobody seems to know just what it is/And the Air Force won't let on/It might be a hole, down in the ocean/Yeah, or a fog that won't let go/It might be some crazy people talking/Or somebody that we ought to know."

2) Barry Manilow's "Bermuda Triangle" (1980)

A hit in Europe, this novelty calypso jam sounds suspiciously like the crooner's 1978 smash "Copacabana." The lesson it contains: If you go to the Bermuda Triangle with your lady, she might "disappear"...with another dude! Damn you Bermuda Triangle!

3) Satan's Triangle (1975)

This made-for-ABC TV movie stars Kim Novak as the sole survivor found aboard a spooky ship made even spookier by its location (see: title). Veteran actor Doug McClure plays the US Coast Guardsman who helicopters in to rescue her, and a horror movie at sea (wish there were more of those!) ensues. It might not sound like much, but this one's got a cult following, due to its memorably freaky ending.

4)Airport '77 (1977)

Dovetailing nicely with the 1970s disaster-movie trend is the third and possibly campiest (though one could make a case for part four: The Concorde … Airport '79) film in the Airport series. A glorious cast (Jimmy Stewart in one of his last roles, Jack Lemmon, Christopher Lee, Joseph Cotten, Olivia de Havilland, Brenda Vaccaro, the immortal George Kennedy) meets a hilariously luxurious plane stuffed with valuable artwork meets a hijacking attempt that's foiled by... guess which cursed geographical airspace over the Atlantic?

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5) Bermuda Triangle Game (Milton Bradley, 1976)

The tag line: "Sinister Mystery Cloud Swallows Ships." Players move plastic ships across the board as the planchette-like fog cloud "HOVERS —WEAVES and SWEEPS," doing its best to foul up everyone's voyage. Worth owning just for the incredible retro box and game art!

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6) Bermuda Triangle game for Atari 2600 (Data Age, 1982)

Beneath the Bermuda Triangle lies a lost city filled with treasures that you and your trusty mini-sub must gather and bring to the surface. But! Beware the giant squid, the hungry shark, explosives, pesky rival ship, and other underwater menaces that'll give your joystick a major workout.

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7) Scooby-Doo in "A Creepy Tangle in the Bermuda Triangle" (1978)

During a hurricane in the Triangle, a plane is slurped up by a UFO. Below, a boat-tripping Fred, Velma, Daphne, Shaggy (his first giant sandwich, "like, a teensy-weensy snack to fight off seasickness!" is prepared two minutes in), and Scooby also encounter the storm. Fortunately, a nearby deserted (OR IS IT?) island offers shelter — and a mystery — for everyone's favorite meddling kids. High points include scuba-diving skeleton men, a hidden lair inside a mountain, and the sight of Scooby-Doo being shot out of a submarine like a torpedo. Jeepers! Jinkies! Zoiks!

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8) Wonder Woman in "The Bermuda Triangle Crisis" (1977)

No UFOs here; the crisis is that Diana Prince, clad in retro resort chic to die for (those headscarves! Those oversized glasses!), has to defend Paradise Island from becoming a testing ground for nukes.

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But it's not all political: As Wonder Woman, she rocks a rad wetsuit worthy of her superheroic fashion sense.

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9) In Search Of...The Bermuda Triangle (1977)

Turtleneck-clad host with the most Leonard Nimoy leads an investigation into the "danger zone for ships and planes." Features interviews with eyewitnesses and re-enactments on both land and sea, and the suggestion that the Bermuda Triangle might serve as an interplanetary communications center.

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10) The Devil's Triangle (1974) and Mystery in the Bermuda Triangle (1979)

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The earlier film is a documentary narrated in the velvet purr of Vincent Price and scored by King Crimson. The later film stars lucha libre gods Santos, Blue Demon, and Mil Mascaras. Neither is a masterpiece, but the fact that both exist is testament to the Bermuda Triangle's all-encompassing hold on pop culture at the time. Also: Would make an A+ double-feature to background your next "Mysteries of the Unknown" theme party.