Journal of Vortex Science and Technology is known for its best articles on Vile vortices.
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. With the growing number of scientific enthusiasts and readers by a large margin, the efficacy of open access publishing has witnessed an assertive impact. 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. The OMICS International handles over 350 titles at present, which also broadly include Open Access journals on Life Sciences, Chemical Sciences, Management and Engineering Sciences which are beneficial to both scholars and students. In collaborative efforts, the journal is focusing on Gravitation, Wireless and Teslaâs Transmission, Environmental monitoring, Biological effectiveness, cell communication by scalar waves. The journal follows a stringent peer-review process that aims to improve the overall quality of the published content and attracting more number of citations. Journal of Vortex Science and Technology is the most counted journal in Vile vortices. Each such journal article becomes part of the permanent scientific record.
Journals contain articles that peer reviewed, in an attempt to ensure that articles meet the journal's standards of quality, and scientific validity. Most journals are highly specialized, although some of the oldest journals publish articles, reviews, editorials, short communications, letters, and scientific papers across a wide range of scientific fields. When this collection of locations is charted on a map of the globe, the result is a perfectly-balanced picture where the twelve locations in question form the vertices of an icosahedron (a 20 sided polyhedron).Ī journal is a periodical publication intended to further progress of science, usually by reporting new research. Vortices in the Tropic of Capricorn: The Zimbabwe Megaliths Wharton Basin, the site of the Wallaby Fracture Zone The edge of the Hebrides Trench near the Fiji Islands Easter Island Colossi The South Atlantic Anomaly The South Pole. A mixed media piece consisting of multiple projections, the work hints at these geographic anomalies and seeks to place viewers literally inside one of these twelve vortices.The Vile Vortices in the Tropic of Cancer: Mohenjo Daro, site of the Rama Empire The Devils Sea (Dragons Triangle) Hamakulia, near Hawaii, the scene of high volcanic activity The Bermuda Triangle The Algerian megalithic ruins The North Pole. Together they form the vertices of an icosahedron.
The vortices are distributed equidistant around the globe with five located on a latitude near the Tropic of Capricorn, five near the Tropic of Cancer, and one each at either of the Poles. Believed to be sites plagued by magnetic anomalies and other unexplained phenomena, the 12 vile vortices roughly correlate to the shape of triangles (the most famous being the Bermuda Triangle and the Dragon’s Triangle (Devil’s Sea)). Sanderson in his 1972 article “The Twelve Devil’s Graveyards Around the World”, fog vortex documents an imagined rift in the landscape where time and space fold in upon themselves. Inspired by the 12 vile vortices as coined by Ivan T. The Twelve Devil's Graveyards Around the Worldĭocumentation of recent exhibition can be found here: /fogvortexdoc.php