Based on the planets’ crystalline properties, they proposed the earth projects from within a “geometrically regularized grid.” According to their theory, that grid is projected as a dodecahedral-isochedron that delineates the earth’s energy structure or skeleton.īased on Sanderson’s work and that of the Russians, a husband and wife team consisting of William Becker (professor of industrial design at the University of Illinois, Chicago) and Bethe Hagens (professor of anthropology at Governors State University) offered “The Planetary Grid: A New Synthesis” in 1984. Recent research suggests that there might be a scientific basis for these portal areas.Ī team of three Russians-historian Nikolai Goncharov, engineer Vyacheslav Morozov, and electronics specialist Valery Makarov-wrote an article titled “Is the Earth a Large Crystal?” for the USSR-sponsored scientific journal Chemistry and Life. (Enoch 76:1–3)Īccording to Enoch, four of these heavenly portals bring prosperity, and eight of them wreak destruction. And the three first are those of the east, and three are of the north, and three after those on the left of the south, and three of the west. the south of the heaven, and three on the left i.e. the east of the heavens, and three in the west, and three on the right i.e. Sanderson felt the weakest example, the area in the southeast Indian Ocean, was rationalized by the “very simple reason that hardly anybody ever goes there, and there are no records.” Įven more fascinating is that Sanderson’s theory is supported by the ancient Book of Enoch, which also speaks of twelve portal areas on the earth:Īnd at the ends of the earth I saw twelve portals open to all the quarters of the heaven, from which the winds go forth and blow over the earth. Others include the “Devil’s Sea” near Japan, the Indus Valley in Pakistan, the Algerian Megaliths just south of Timbuktu in the West African nation of Mali, and the Hamakulia Volcano in Hawaii and the North and South poles.
The best-known vile vortex area is the Bermuda Triangle. Sanderson enlisted the help of a geometer who determined that these lie precisely opposite of each other directly through “the exact center of the earth.” The other two are the north and south poles. Five of the vortices are on the same latitude to the south of the equator five are on the same latitude to the north. He credited Charles Hapgood, who referred to them in his book, The Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings. 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. The twelve “vile vortices” are geographic areas that are alleged to be the sites of mysterious disappearances and other high-profile anomalies.