Similarities between Bermuda Triangle and Devil's Sea
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Bermuda Triangle and Devil's Sea
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- All over the world, there are many mysterious places on land and water that are difficult to explain logically. The legend of missing ships and ghost ships sailing at sea without a crew makes these places synonymous with mystery. Though the infamous Bermuda triangle is at the top of the list of most mysterious places on the earth, there are a lot of other sites that are just as enigmatic.
- The Devil’s Sea, also known as the Dragon Triangle, is one of the most famous sailing nightmares in the world. The Devil’s Sea (the real Sea of Japan) is one of the twelve terrifying vortices on Earth, located near the coast of Japan in the Pacific Ocean.
- The gravitational attraction of the planet's electromagnetic radiation is stronger in vile vortices than anyplace else. The Dragon's Triangle, as its name implies, forms a triangle between Japan and the Bonin Islands, encompassing a large area of the Philippine Sea.
- The area has also been dubbed the Pacific Bermuda Triangle, owing to its location, which is exactly opposite that of the Bermuda Triangle, and the area's "paranormal phenomena" being comparable to those of the Bermuda Triangle.
- This maritime region's terrible reputation did not emerge overnight, but has existed for decades, if not centuries, according to certain records. The area has been in the headlines for decades because of strange ship disappearances. Legend has it that the waters of the triangle can cause even the most powerful ships to vanish, taking their crews with them.
- A number of fishing vessels and over five military warships vanished in the waters between Miyake Island and Iwo Jima in the late twentieth century, particularly in the 1940s and 1950s.
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