Gian J. Quasar is the first person to completely document the Bermuda Triangle, incident by incident. His research began over 20 years ago, and he has compiled the largest private repository of reports and official maritime documents, containing over 350 cases spanning over 2 centuries. Over 150 of these have been disappearances which have happened in the last 25 years.
His tenacity in finding every scrap available has gained him popular recognition as the man responsible for bringing the subject forward for an entirely new generation, as well as presenting it in a mature and objective manner.
As a young man of 24, Quasar channeled his knack for research toward investigating once-popular world mysteries that had enchanted Generation X and Baby Boomers. By 1990 the Bermuda Triangle had been written-off as a hoax based on sensationalism and poor journalism. But this impression has been changed from Quasar’s work. In 1999 this web site went up after 9 years of research, presenting for the first time the only research done on the topic of the Triangle in over 20 years. In that time Quasar had discovered not only more statistics and documentation for “classic” cases of unexplained disappearances, he had also been documenting current disappearances. This led to a vast database of disappearances of which no one had ever heard. www.bermuda-triangle.org pushed Quasar into the forefront of publicity on the topic, and to this day he is recognized as the leading authority on the subject. His book, Into the Bermuda Triangle, was published by McGraw-Hill in 2003.