The first of these was the Devil’s Sea, off the coast of Japan. Once Sanderson began researching the area, he began receiving information about other areas where similar anomalies had occurred. Sanderson states that a Martin mariner was deployed to search for the planes and that it disappeared “within fifteen minutes.” Other reports claim that a nearby tanker witnessed an explosion as well as an oil slick leading to the conclusion that the Mariner had exploded, most likely a result of vapor leaks from being overloaded with fuel.ĭragon’s Triangle, also known as Devil’s Sea/image from The Odyssey OnlineĪ 1966 story on this incident incorrectly referred to the area of occurrence as the Bermuda Triangle, even though, according to Sanderson, it is shaped more like a lozenge.
However, other reports of this incident omit any mention of the pilots’ radio conversation, resolving the disappearance as a navigational error which caused the planes to run out of fuel.
Sanderson claims the pilots were in radio contact with each other right up until the time of their disappearance, reporting that they had no idea where they were and that the ocean looked wrong. According to Sanderson, the mysterious disappearances in this area were mostly overlooked until December 5, 1945, when five TBM Avenger torpedo bombers disappeared after taking off from the Fort Lauderdale Naval Air Station on a routine patrol. The most well-known of these areas, as well as the one which initially piqued his interest, is the Bermuda Triangle. In this article, he explains how he came to discover twelve “equally spaced areas on the surface of Earth where ‘funny things happen.’” Sanderson, a Scottish biologist who founded the Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained, published an article entitled “The Twelve Devil’s Graveyards Around The World” in an issue of Saga magazine. Ten of the twelve vortices/image from pinterest