It was at Sanderson's 'Farm' that Charles Berlitz researched and wrote parts of The Bermuda Triangle, and from Sanderson's vile vortices that he drew the inspiration for the Devil's Sea. It was only upon his book's 1974 appearance, which did discuss the Devil's Sea in addition to the Bermuda Triangle, that the literature suddenly became flooded. (1) The most famous of the vile vortices is the Bermuda Triangle that is situated between Bermuda, Florida, and Puerto Rico. (2) In the last 100 years about 20 airplanes and 50 ships have been reported missing while they were crossing that part of the sea, which is known as the Bermuda Triangle.
Are they sure they want to neutralize the aluminum isotope 26 in the 12 Vile Vortices? Are they sure the isotopes in the Vortices will deplete the earths' magnetic field? Instead of neutralizing the Vortices in hope it will save the earths' magnetic field maybe we should have to gargantuan electric coils at each pole. The coils frozen to superconductor absolute zero temperature, so as to allow infinite electric input and zero electric output - keep pumping the coils with electricity until they create a magnetic shield around our planet. To answer Que the, History Channel show was about: according to the show, a man lost his son due to an unusual dog attack. The man heard about the 12 Vile Vortices (see ) the theory of Ivan Sanderson of 12 evenly spaced geographic zones where disasters are most prevalent such as the Bermuda Triangle (which is one of the Vile Vortices).
The man in the show discovered from core samples taken from each of the 12 triangles and found unusually high concentrations of aluminum 26 isotope. This particular isotope affects compass readings and perhaps animal behavior. The aluminum is this isotope purportedly has shielding and hence drag on the magnetosphere perhaps slowing the rotation of the molten outer core of earth. This rotation is believed to be what creates the magnetosphere.
Without the magnetosphere earths' atmosphere and surface water would be blown away by cosmic rays from the sun.
A vile vortex is any of twelve purported particular geographic areas, arranged in a pattern around the Earth. The term was coined in the 20th century by Ivan T. Sanderson, who cataloged them as the sites of unexplained disappearances and other mysterious phenomena.[1][2]
Overview[edit]
Ivan T. Sanderson asserts that twelve vortices (famously, the Bermuda Triangle) are situated along particular lines of latitude:[2] five of the vortices are on the same latitude to the south of the equator; five are on the same latitude to the north. The other two are the north and south poles.[3]
The idea has been taken up by other fringe writers, who have argued that the vortices are linked to 'subtle matter energy', 'ley lines', or 'electro-magnetic aberration'. The phenomenon is addressed as geometric patterns in the book Anti-gravity and the World Grid.[4]
Paul Begg, in a series of articles for The Unexplained magazine, criticized the methodology of writers on the subject of unexplained disappearances. He checked original records of the alleged incidents. Often, he found, the ships which were claimed to have mysteriously disappeared actually had a mundane reason for their loss (for instance Raifuku Maru). Some were lost in storms, although the vortex writers would claim that the weather was fine at the time. In other cases, locations of losses were changed to fit the location of the vortex. Sometimes no record was found that the ship had ever existed.[5]
The arrangement of twelve vile vortices on a map of the Earth.
Locations[edit]
- Bermuda Triangle is the best known of the vile vortices.
- Algerian Megaliths are in North Africa.
- Indus Valley is in the city of Mohenjo Daro, Pakistan.
- 'Devil's Sea' is south of Japan.
- Hamakulia Volcano is east of Hawaii.
- South Atlantic Anomaly is east of Rio de Janeiro.
- Great Zimbabwe mines and structures
In media[edit]
In the dramatized TV episode 'The Devil's Graveyards' by History Channel, the phenomenon is explored as a result of magnetism, also citing Sanderson and a variety of other scientific sources. The show attributes a pattern of violent animal behavior and global warming to vile vortices, based on the magnetic changes in the Earth's rotation, with the vortices having been possibly created or exacerbated by intelligent means.[6]
References[edit]
- ^Sanderson, Ivan T. (1972). 'The Twelve Devil's Graveyards Around the World'. Saga.
- ^ abNeilson, Brett. (2004). Free trade in the Bermuda Triangle — and other tales of counterglobalization. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. pp. 44–45. ISBN0-8166-3871-3.
- ^Sanderson, Ivan T. (2005). Invisible Residents: The Reality of Underwater UFOs. Kempton, IL: Adventures Unlimited Press. ISBN9781931882200. OCLC61504967. Retrieved December 6, 2015.
- ^Childress, David Hatcher (1987). Anti-gravity and the World Grid. Lost Science Series. Stelle, IL: Adventures Unlimited Press. p. 35. ISBN9780932813039. OCLC15492200. Retrieved December 6, 2015.bibliotecapleyades.net
- ^Begg, Paul. 'Tales from the Bermuda Triangle' and succeeding articles, reprinted in Out of This World: Mysteries of Mind, Space and Time (Caxton, 1989), pp 8–22.
- ^'The Devil's Graveyards'. History Specials. Season 1. History Channel. November 1, 2014.
Further reading[edit]
- Kusche, Lawrence David. The Bermuda Triangle Mystery–Solved. Harper & Row, 1975.
External links[edit]
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