
Nevertheless, close to mainland Japan Sea Devils was also responsible for the loss of several ships and aircraft. Between 1950 and 1954, this area has lost no less than nine large ships without leaving a trace. The Japanese government is very much concerned about this area, and announces that he's being a dangerous area and should not be approached. In 1955 the Japanese government sent an expedition to bring the experts to the area by boat Kawamaru. Unfortunately Kawamaru vanished without a message.
An American scholar, Ivan Sanderson, who is very interested in all the weirdness, trying to see the location of the Bermuda Triangle and Devil's Sea Japan in the map. Turns out he saw that the two regions are located just underlined longitude between 30 and 40 degrees north of the equator, about the same extent (see map above).

Sanderson observed that most of these regions are similar to each other, among other things, it lies in a region where the hot and cold currents meet, and that place is viewed as a point-node, because it directs the water flow over and under the direction opposite, and with the different temperatures, can cause magnetic waves that be the culprit for all accidents. but Sanderson's theory is not founded on a proposition.
No anything that proves that the confluence of two streams of water in the opposite direction and with different temperatures can produce magnetic waves in the earth. Furthermore, the theory fails to answer the question, why the ships became victims in places like the abandoned passengers for granted, and where did they go? So, what are the events that seemed so scary to them, so they left the boat?
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