Info
Written by Praetor3005 for Folklorecon2025 yeeeee
Author page here ig
About the World Cryptoscience organization
Who we are
The WCO is a public and international agency of the United Nation Organization whose role is to gather and lead different cryptoscience organizations from all nations, in order to unravel the phenomena and testimonies considered as mysterious and unknown. In parralel, the WCO also works on allowing the public to have access to reliable and complete information about the latest discoveries in cryptoscience, as well as all archived breakthroughs.
Created in 2006, its goal was to counter the growth of obscurantism and conspiracy theories everywhere in the world, mainly because of the rise of social media and the wide speading of information allowed by the internet. Since then, the organization managed to highlight and understand many phenomena and rumors, such as the discovery and study of various species prevously known as cryptids by the local populations, such as
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Michael Oxford <moc.ocw|drofxoleahcim#moc.ocw|drofxoleahcim>To: Xavier Calvet ▼
Mr Calvet,
The World Cryptoscience Organization has the pleasure to inform you that your twinning request for the Bermuda Triangle research case has been accepted.
You will therefore be assisted by the Miami Institute of geology's cryptoscience team, starting PLACEHOLDERDATE until the end of the project.
We wish you the best for this research project.
Michael Oxford, planning department
Wold Cryptoscience Organization
. . .
PLACEHOLDERLOGO PLACEHOLDERSITENAME
PLACEHOLDERARTICLENAME
PLACEHOLDERARTICLECONTENT
. . .
World Cryptoscience Organization
Preface: The following document is a written retranscription of an call between the cryptophysician and head reseacher Michael Oxford of the CERN and the cryptogeologist Brian Hammer from the Miami institute of geology.
The lead hypothesis of the project is linked to possible methane blowouts from craters on the bottom of the ocean, which explosions could have created massive wirlpools engulfing the many ships, or even planes, that got lost over the ages, possibly coupled to difficult weather conditions. Therefore, a non-inhabited submarine equiped with a sonar, with two goals in mind. First, trying to find possible remains of sunken ships, allowing for a more narrow field of search. Secondly, the cartography of the area, in order to potentially find some methan blowout craters. The submarine started to dive in the following coordinates [25.22N 77.34W], corresponding to the last known coordonates of a US Navy PBM3S patrol seaplane who disappeared in the area.
As Michael Oxford had to remain in Miami to collect data on the last coordonates of the more recent disparitions in the Bermuda Triangle, he couldn't make it in person on the research ship to watch the sonar catrography in direct.
| Michael Oxford | Hello? Did you guys started mapping the area? |
|---|---|
| Brian Hammer | Hey Michael! We started almost two hours ago. You're late to the party. |
| Michael Oxford | That's a relief. Listen, Major Auxon told me that according to the archives they have, the two most recent ships lost in the Bermuda trangle both were in 2025. First one was in late july of 2015, it was two young childern going on a fishing trip. Only their boat was found back, around a year later. Second one was SS El Faro, a cargo ship who disappeared because of Hurricane Joaquin. Those two seem to disprove the whirlhole theory so far, but that's only a small sample and we get less and less lost ships these days. I guess it makes sense, since technology has become incrisingly better since World War 2. Did you guys find any remnants so far? |
| Brian Hammer | Mmmh… Were those two near the zone we're investigating? |
| Michael Oxford | Not in the slightest. Near Florida for the first, and near the Bahamas' coasts for the second. |
| Brian Hammer | I think the current hypothesis could still be in play. Those aren't places you'd find massive sea craters, you know. And it's always easier to find ship remnants when the closest ground you can find isn't deep down. |
| Michael Oxford | Speaking of deep down, any ship so far? |
| Brian Hammer | Absolutely nothing, I'm afraid. We updated the map five minutes ago, but still nothing worth noting. It's deep for sure, but it's pretty flat. No ship, no crater. Right now the submarine is following a slight scar in the rocks. We found a big crater, and we noted the coordonates, but I'm unsure on if it's sufficient to call it a day. |
| Michael Oxford | Weird… I would have expected at least one ship or plane remnant in two hours. I mean, that's THE ZONE. That's where we are statistically more likely to find anything. |
| Brian Hammer | Oh hold on I think the sonar isn't sending anything anymore. |
| Michael Oxford | When was the crater recorded exactly? I can cross the coordonates with the ship and plane data I got today. |
| Brian Hammer | Wait no it's… Stil recording the sides. There's something deep on the front of the submarine. But the forms are so geometrical it looks like no other ocean trench. |
| Michael Oxford | That's… Weird indeed. Well, that wasn't the lead clue but you made me curious about that. |
| Brian Hammer | I'm unsure. That's probably a sonar issue, with sides as straight as that. |
| Michael Oxford | Oh of course. But you know the drill, take weird stuff and explain it, that's the duty. Send me the data you have so far, I'll check it with the rest of your team while you all finish the sonar duty. If the sonar is damaged we'll have to discard all the data, so better check just in case. |
| Brian Hammer | Will do! I assume ye're cutting the call short? |
| Michael Oxford | It seems like it! Well, see you at dinner! |
| Brian Hammer | See you! |
Aftermath: The day following the sonar dive, the data has been compiled into a map and analysed. While the crater seem to be too big and closed for a possible methan blowout zone, the geometrical lack of data found the same day has interrogated both the physicians and geologists of the project. Indeed, With no sonar dysfunction, this leads the team to believe there is indeed an unrecorded pit which, albeit small, presents some weird sides. The failure of echolocalization makes this possibly extremely deep, which mean exploring it would be hassle. To confirm its existence, as well as to get actual footage, a new submarine, this time with a camera, will be used near the coordonates of the unexplained hole.
notes:
*storm creates rogue waves -> that instead of methan shit
- https://discord.com/channels/695664941247627274/695671793570152448/1276626637504512151 from Goerman -> using what was made with L26 and Philadelphia experiment as a root for explaining noclipping (maybe even mentionning it? Like after the guy realize the hypothesis after that videogame session, he could research this and use this knowledge on the Bermuda Triangle case)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-domain_Anomaly_Resolution_Office part of the WCO (working with them I mean), just mentioning them as an example in the WCO présentation paragraph
pauli exclusion principle inspiration for the physic explanation part?
Puerto Rico Trench -> 8 300 meters deep


