The other thing we know for certain is that people are dying here. In short, something weird is going on down there, even if some simply credit the gulf stream and other natural phenomena. Even those who have not been lost there have reported glowing water, spinning compasses, random malfunctions, and strange sightings while passing through. Whole fleets of torpedo bombers, spy planes, navy ships, the infamous Mary Celeste and more have all come to mysterious calamity in the area of ocean near the tip of Florida. The Bermuda Triangle has a long and sordid history, as well as a few “celebrity” guest appearances. Other theories have more to do with subtle matter energy or electro-magnetic aberration, which is an idea involving geometric patterns actually addressed by Plato thousands of years ago.īut when you get right down to it, we still don’t fully know why these locations appear to line up so well, or what causes them to be hot-beds of paranormal activity.
One such idea involved Ley Lines, or the idea that important places and manmade objects line up because of spiritual energy or earthly feng shui. Sanderson and other paranormal theorists had a few ideas on what exactly caused all of these places to be in order. They Might Be Caused by “Electro-Magnetic Aberration” In fact, five are along the Tropic of Capricorn, and five are along the Tropic of Cancer, with only the North and South Pole not being along those lines, meaning the vortices are mostly located near warm, tropical climates. They’re also evenly spread out distance-wise, which investigators have suggested prove there is something logical and mathematical to the chaos. That’s because half are distributed above the equator and half are distributed below the equator. You might notice that these vortices seem pretty spread out. These vortices are: Bermuda Triangle, theĪlgerian Megaliths, the city of Mohenjo Daro, the Hamakulia Volcano east of Hawaii, the “Devil’s Sea,” the South Atlantic Anomaly, the Wharton Basin, the Easter Island megaliths, East of Rio de Janeiro, the Loyalty Islands, the North Pole, and the South Pole.
He then mapped these 12 most paranormally-active areas and named them the Vile Vortices. In his travels and studies during the early 70s, he began to notice that there were specific regions where things seemed to go strange, where planes and people seemed to disappear, and where UFO sightings seemed to take place. He would go on expeditions and record what he saw and experienced in drawings, reports, and even photographs, and for fun he even dabbled in science fiction. Sanderson was a biologist, writer, animal enthusiast, and huge fan of all things paranormal. A Scottish Biologist First Discovered the Vortices But be ready for spooky stories, unanswered questions, and age old mysteries that have no known explanation…yet. If you’re itching to learn more, you’re in luck.