Skeptoid - Skeptoid #337: The Bermuda Triangle and the Devil's Sea Aired: 2012-11-20 Duration: 17:47 === Debunking the Bermuda Triangle Myth (09:39) === [00:00:03] The Bermuda Triangle off the United States southeast coast and the Devil's Sea off of Japan are notorious, as we know, for the unusually large number of disappearances inside them. [00:00:16] And if you've studied either, you know that's simply not true. [00:00:20] Nothing out of the ordinary happens at either place. [00:00:23] So exactly why do the two regions exist? [00:00:27] What drove people to contrive them? [00:00:30] That's today on Skeptoid. [00:00:36] Hi, I'm Alex Goldman. [00:00:38] You may know me as the host of Reply All, but I'm done with that. [00:00:42] I'm doing something else now. [00:00:44] I've started a new podcast called Hyperfixed. [00:00:47] On every episode of Hyperfixed, listeners write in with their problems and I try to solve them. [00:00:52] Some massive and life-altering and some so minuscule it'll boggle your mind. [00:00:56] No matter the problem, no matter the size, I'm here for you. [00:00:59] That's HyperFixed, the new podcast from Radiotopia. [00:01:02] Find it wherever you listen to podcasts or at hyperfixedpod.com. [00:01:12] You're listening to Skeptoid. [00:01:14] I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. [00:01:17] The Bermuda Triangle and the Devil's Sea. [00:01:21] Today we're going to hit the high seas and venture into a matched pair of alleged danger zones where ships and airplanes are said to disappear at an alarming rate. [00:01:31] Some believe that the Bermuda Triangle and its twin, the Devil's Sea, south of Japan, are merely regions where natural forces combine to form a genuine navigational hazard, while others believe that some unknown agent is responsible for sweeping the hapless travelers from the face of the earth. [00:01:48] Today we're going to dive into the waters to see how deep the mysteries really are. [00:01:54] Let's begin with the Bermuda Triangle. [00:01:59] It's perhaps the best known of all the world's regions said to be strangely treacherous. [00:02:04] The triangle goes from Miami to Bermuda to Puerto Rico, and despite a huge amount of normal shipping traffic passing through it every day, stories persist that some force there lurks to pull ships and planes to a watery grave. [00:02:19] The most common appearance of the Bermuda Triangle today is on television documentaries and popular books that purport to take a, quote, science-based look at the phenomenon. [00:02:30] They give the appearance of skepticism by dismissing the paranormal explanations like psychic energy or Atlantis or alien abductions and instead focus on natural phenomena that could be responsible for disappearances. [00:02:45] These include rogue waves, undersea methane explosions, or strange geomagnetic fluctuations. [00:02:52] They test these explanations with scale models and sophisticated simulations. [00:02:59] But in fact, this representation of being scientific is wrong. [00:03:04] To investigate the Bermuda Triangle scientifically, we would start with an observation and then test hypotheses to explain it. [00:03:12] Popular programming today tends to skip the very first step, actually having an observation to explain. [00:03:22] One of the first things you learn when researching the Bermuda Triangle responsibly, which means including source material beyond the TV shockumentaries and pulp paperbacks that promote the mystery wholeheartedly, is that transportation losses inside the Bermuda Triangle do not occur at a rate higher than anywhere else. [00:03:41] And the number of losses that are unexplained is also not any higher. [00:03:46] Statistically speaking, there is no Bermuda Triangle. [00:03:50] The books and TV shows are trying to explain an imaginary observation. [00:03:56] The United States Coast Guard, which is the primary safety authority in the area, has this to say. [00:04:02] The Coast Guard does not recognize the existence of the so-called Bermuda Triangle as a geographic area of specific hazard to ships or planes. [00:04:11] In a review of many aircraft and vessel losses in the area over the years, there has been nothing discovered that would indicate that casualties were the result of anything other than physical causes. [00:04:21] No extraordinary factors have ever been identified. [00:04:26] That's not to say that losses don't occur there. [00:04:28] They do. [00:04:29] They also occur everywhere else on Earth. [00:04:31] Some are unexplained. [00:04:33] A similar percentage of losses worldwide are also unexplained. [00:04:37] Unexplained doesn't mean unexplainable. [00:04:40] It simply means that insufficient evidence remained to allow the cause of the loss to be determined, which is sadly all too common with ships and planes that go down at sea. [00:04:52] So then, how and why does the story exist at all? [00:04:57] The answer is that it never did until 1945 when a flight of five Navy training planes, the infamous Flight 19, ran out of fuel and ditched and were unfortunately never recovered. [00:05:10] An author, Vincent Gaddis, dramatized this in the fiction magazine Argosy in 1964 with a story titled The Deadly Bermuda Triangle, the first time the name is known to have been used. [00:05:23] But it remained a relatively unknown footnote until 1974, when paranormal author Charles Berlitz published his mass-market paperback, The Bermuda Triangle. [00:05:35] It was the perfect book for the New Age movement of the 1970s, and quite suddenly, the triangle became a giant fixture in urban legendary. [00:05:45] It fell to a skeptical researcher, Larry Cush, to attempt to debunk Berlitz's assault on the public intellect, which he did most thoroughly with his book published the following year, titled The Bermuda Triangle Solved. [00:06:00] Unfortunately, as we see so often, the market took little interest in the humdrum assertion that something amazing and paranormal did not in fact exist. [00:06:10] And it was Berlitz's version that has remained the icon of the story. [00:06:16] On his summary of the Bermuda Triangle, researcher Robert Carroll writes of Cush's efforts. [00:06:22] After examining the 400-plus page official report of the Navy Board of Investigation of the disappearance of the Navy planes in 1945, Cush found that the board wasn't baffled at all by the incident and did not mention alleged radio transmissions cited by Berlitz in his book. [00:06:40] According to Cush, what isn't misinterpreted by Berlitz is fabricated. [00:06:45] Cush writes, If Berlitz were to report that a boat were red, the chance of it being some other color is almost a certainty. [00:06:54] And so despite the fact that unexplained losses have happened there, just as they happen everywhere, it turns out that the Bermuda Triangle is nothing more than an invention and subsequent embellishment by imaginative authors. [00:07:11] The Devil's Sea It goes by many names, the Devil's Sea, the Dragon's Triangle, and the Taiwan Triangle. [00:07:20] And just as is the Bermuda Triangle, it's even sometimes called the Devil's Triangle. [00:07:26] Its location varies a bit depending on which author you read, but the triangle usually runs from Taiwan up to the volcanic island of Miyakejima, just south of Tokyo, to about Iwojima or thereabouts. [00:07:39] Miyakejima and Iwojima lie along the Izu-Bonin Volcanic Arc, a line of underwater volcanoes and islands that's part of a system stretching 2,500 kilometers from Japan to Guam. [00:07:52] Some, like Charles Berlitz, say that the Devil's Sea is every bit as dangerous and mysterious as the Bermuda Triangle. [00:08:05] In a world that can feel overwhelming, spreading thoughtful, evidence-based content is one of the best ways to make a positive impact. [00:08:12] Ask your local public radio station to air the Skeptoid Files, a 30-minute radio-friendly version of Skeptoid that pairs two related episodes promoting real science, true history, and critical thinking. [00:08:26] And in these challenging times for public media, we're offering these broadcasts for free to radio stations, available on the PRX Exchange or directly from Skeptoid Media. [00:08:37] It's an easy ask. [00:08:39] Just send a quick message to your station's programming director. [00:08:42] By helping to bring the Skeptoid files to the airwaves, you'll help promote the essential skills we all need to tell fact from fiction. [00:08:50] Just go to your local station's website, find the programming director's email address, or just their general email address. [00:08:56] You can even use the telephone. [00:08:58] I know that might sound crazy. [00:09:00] It's an old legacy device that allows real-time voice communication. [00:09:04] I know that's weird, but hey, it's an option. [00:09:08] The world can feel chaotic, but you're not powerless. [00:09:11] When you promote critical thinking, you can help your community tell fact from fiction. [00:09:16] And that's how we shape a better future. [00:09:18] In uncertain times, spreading good ideas can make you feel helpful, not helpless. [00:09:24] Let's stand up for reason, truth, and understanding. [00:09:28] Together, get them to air the Skeptoid files from Skeptoid Media, available on the PRX Exchange, and they'll know what that is. === Origins of the Devil's Sea Legend (05:12) === [00:09:42] In his 1989 book, The Dragon's Triangle, Berlitz said that Japan lost five military vessels in the area between 1952 and 1954 alone, with a loss of some 700 sailors. [00:09:56] In Dan Cohen's 1974 book, Curses, Hexes, and Spells, it's reported that legends of the danger of the Devil's Sea go back for centuries in Japan. [00:10:07] Its most famous casualty was the number five Kayomaru, a scientific research vessel, which disappeared with the loss of all hands on September 24th, 1953, a date often wrongly reported as 1952 or 1958. [00:10:25] With such a dramatic history, you'd expect there to be all sorts of books on the subject, especially in Japan. [00:10:32] But it turns out that the eager researcher is disappointed. [00:10:36] A search for books, newspaper, or magazine articles on the Devil's Sea comes up completely empty until a full 20 years after the loss of the Kayomaru. [00:10:48] Apparently, the story, even the very existence of this legendary named area, was not invented until very recently. [00:10:57] Enter cryptozoologist and paranormal enthusiast Ivan T. Sanderson, well known for his Bigfoot searches, but perhaps not as well known for his Society for the Investigation of the Unexplained. [00:11:11] Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, New Agers and other paranormalists would hang out at Sanderson's estate, nicknamed The Farm, and read, write, and research. [00:11:22] In his group's newsletter, Pursuit, in April of 1971, Sanderson wrote of something he called Vile Vortices, 12 spots around the globe that he believed could be portals to another dimension. [00:11:36] In 1972, the article was reprinted in Saga magazine under the title, The 12 Devils' Graveyards Around the World. [00:11:46] In addition to the North Pole and the South Pole, Sanderson proposed 10 triangles circling the globe, all the same size, shape, and orientation as the Bermuda Triangle. [00:11:57] Five, including the Bermuda Triangle, are supposedly spaced equidistantly around the Tropic of Cancer, about 23.5 degrees north, and the other five staggered between them along the Tropic of Capricorn, about 23.5 degrees south. [00:12:12] The Devil's Sea is another of the five northern triangles, with another enclosing the volcanoes of Hawaii. [00:12:20] Sanderson's vile vortices are just one of any number of theoretical grid systems overlaid onto the Earth by New Age enthusiasts over the years. [00:12:29] An icosahedron, a shape made of 20 equilateral triangles, can be roughly fitted over Sanderson's grid, if you use a little imagination. [00:12:39] Other grid systems suggest a dodecahedron, a 12-sided figure with pentagonal sides. [00:12:46] There's the Becker-Haggins Planetary Grid System of 1983, and the so-called Russian grid, which represents the Earth as a crystalline shape. [00:12:55] Take virtually any ancient site, the Great Pyramid, Machu Picchu, Tiwanaku, and you can be sure that a New Ager has written a book drawing ley lines through it and calling its position on the Earth spiritually significant. [00:13:12] It was at Sanderson's farm that Charles Berlitz researched and wrote parts of the Bermuda Triangle, and from Sanderson's Vial Vortices that he drew the inspiration for the Devil's Sea. [00:13:25] 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 with accounts of this new mystery region, and with tales that it had been feared for centuries. [00:13:41] Try as I might, I was not able to find any reference to the Devil's Sea or any of its other names in any books or newspapers, either in English or in Japanese, prior to Berlitz and Sanderson's publications. [00:13:56] Such a search reveals that nearly all published references are from the early 70s, immediately upon the heels of Sanderson's 1971 and 1972 articles. [00:14:08] In short, there is no Devil's Sea, and there never was, outside the imagination of Ivan Sanderson and the authors who wrote about his vile vortices. [00:14:20] As he did with Berlitz's Bermuda Triangle book, Larry Cush also took on the task of setting the record straight about the alleged disappearances of Japanese military boats sighted by Berlitz in his 1989 The Dragon's Triangle. [00:14:34] Cush did find that what Berlitz had called military vessels were actually fishing boats, and they'd been lost at the same rate that fishing boats have always been lost in and around Japan, whether they were inside Sanderson's vortex or not. [00:14:50] Deep sea fishing has always been dangerous, and sometimes fishing boats sink. === Skepticism as the Best Medicine (02:52) === [00:14:55] No mystery needed. [00:14:57] It turns out that the 1953 loss of the No. 5 Kayumaru was not mysterious either. [00:15:04] Its crew of nine scientists and 22 crew were on hand to document a very active submarine volcano called Myojinsho, which erupted from 1952 to 1953, creating an island that repeatedly appeared and exploded. [00:15:19] The boat was simply at the wrong place at the wrong time and was destroyed by volcanic ejecta, creating something of a national tragedy. [00:15:28] Debris from the ship was later found, proving that it had not gone to some alternate dimension in some author's mind. [00:15:37] And so we find that most popular attempts to solve the Bermuda Triangle and Devil's Sea mysteries are mere fool's gold. [00:15:44] They are searches for answers to a question that is made up and has none. [00:15:49] As with so many mysteries we examine here on Skeptoid, the actual discovery is to look past the fictional questions posed by the marketers and instead understand the reasons why the legend exists at all and how it came to be such a phenomenon. [00:16:04] Finding the right answer is not always as important as asking the right question. [00:16:15] Want me to come to you? [00:16:16] Skeptoid has fun live shows for schools, for companies, and every group in between. [00:16:22] Come to skeptoid.com and click on live shows to schedule one today. [00:16:30] You're listening to Skeptoid. [00:16:32] I'm Brian Dunning from Skeptoid.com. 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