See More surrounding these areas may be due to electromagnetic disturbances cause by hot and cold air, but there were some who felt that there may be connections to ley lines, or to extraterrestrial activity. Sanderson first coined the term, Vile Vortices 1 in his article The Twelve Devil’s Graveyards Around the World (Saga magazine, 1972). Sanderson, a naturalist and paranormal investigator. The twelve areas were first proposed by biologist and researcher, Ivan Sanderson, in the article The Twelve Devil’s Graveyards Around the World, first published in Saga magazine. By definition, the Vile Vortices would be miserable whirlers but actually they are twelve vertex points of a planetary grid (see Figure 1) originally plotted by Ivan T. Ivan Sanderson who, while investigating disappearances in the, initially came up with the idea of the so-called vile vortices, The Devil’s Graveyard starts off with a disclaimer which states that this dramatization is based on an actual 1972 document entitled ‘The Twelve Devil’s Graveyards Around the World. The twelve vile vortices are geographic areas that are alleged to be the sites of mysterious disappearances and other high-profile anomalies. He found these areas to be equidistant from each other, each one 72 degrees from the other, and named them the vile vortices. Based largely on the rather sketchy theories of zoologist Dr. By definition, the Vile Vortices would be miserable whirlers but actually they are twelve vertex points of a planetary grid (see Figure 1) originally plotted by Ivan T. Youre probably familiar with the Bermuda Triangle, but did you know it has eleven siblings According to cryptozoologist and paranormal expert Ivan.
![the vile vortices the vile vortices](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81Q49IJxsNL._SS500_.jpg)
![the vile vortices the vile vortices](https://static0.thetravelimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/dragons-triangle7.jpg)
![the vile vortices the vile vortices](https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4084/5064230150_000281724f_b.jpg)
The areas are then extruded and the map is. Sanderson, a Scottish biologist, began to take notice that there were specific regions on Earth, twelve to be exact, where planes, ships and people seemed to disappear without a trace, as well as other unexplained anomalies like spinning compasses, failing electrical equipment and UFO sightings occurred. Reinvention of a theorem leading to place 12 vile vortices, from Ivan Sanderson theory, on maps.