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Crop circle

A crop circle, crop formation, or corn circle is a pattern created by flattening a crop,[1] usually a cereal. The term was first coined in the early 1980s by Colin Andrews.[2] Crop circles have been described as all falling "within the range of the sort of thing done in hoaxes" by Taner Edis, professor of physics at Truman State University.[3] Although obscure natural causes or alien origins of crop circles are suggested by fringe theorists,[4] there is no scientific evidence for such explanations, and all crop circles are consistent with human causation.[5][6][7]

Aerial view of crop circles in Switzerland

The number of reports of crop circles has substantially increased since the 1970s. There has been scant scientific study of them. Circles in the United Kingdom are not distributed randomly across the landscape but appear near roads, areas of medium to dense population and cultural heritage monuments, such as Stonehenge or Avebury.[8] In 1991, two hoaxers, Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, took credit for having created many circles throughout England after one of their circles was described by an investigator as impossible for human beings to make.[9]

Formations are usually created overnight,[10] although some are reported to have appeared during the day.[11] In contrast to crop circles or crop formations, archaeological remains can cause cropmarks in the fields in the shapes of circles and squares, but they do not appear overnight, and they are always in the same places every year. Nearly half of all crop circles found in the UK in 2003 were located within a 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) radius of the Avebury stone circles.[12]

History

Before the 20th century

A 1678 news pamphlet The Mowing-Devil: or, Strange News Out of Hartfordshire is claimed by some crop circle devotees[who?] to be the first depiction of a crop circle.[13] Crop circle researcher Jim Schnabel does not consider it to be a historical precedent because it describes the stalks as being cut rather than bent[13] (see folklore section).

In 1686, an English naturalist, Robert Plot, reported on rings or arcs of mushrooms (see fairy rings) in The Natural History of Stafford-Shire and proposed air flows from the sky as a cause.[14][15] In 1991 meteorologist Terence Meaden linked this report with modern crop circles, a claim that has been compared with those made by Erich von Däniken.[n 1]

An 1880 letter to the editor of Nature by amateur scientist John Rand Capron describes how several circles of flattened crops in a field were formed under suspicious circumstances and possibly caused by "cyclonic wind action", stating "as viewed from a distance, circular spots (...) they all presented much the same character, viz, a few standing stalks as a centre, some prostrate stalks with their heads arranged pretty evenly in a direction forming a circle round the centre, and outside there a circular wall of stalks which had not suffered".[n 2]

20th century

In 1932, the archaeologist E. C. Curwen observed four dark rings in a field at Stoughton Down near Chichester, but could examine only one: "a circle in which the barley was 'lodged' or beaten down, while the interior area was very slightly mounded up."[18]

In 1963, Patrick Moore described a crater in a potato field in Wiltshire that he considered was probably caused by an unknown meteoric body. In nearby wheat fields, there were several circular and elliptical areas where the wheat had been flattened. There was evidence of "spiral flattening". He thought they could be caused by air currents from the impact, since they led towards the crater.[19] Astronomer Hugh Ernest Butler observed similar craters and said they were likely caused by lightning strikes.[20]

During the 1960s, there were many reports of UFO sightings and circular formations in swamp reeds and sugarcane fields in Tully, Queensland, Australia, and in Canada.[21] For example, on 8 August 1967, three circles were found in a field in Duhamel, Alberta, Canada; Department of National Defence investigators concluded that it was artificial but couldn't say who made them or how.[22] The most famous case is the 1966 Tully "saucer nest", when a farmer said he witnessed a saucer-shaped craft rise 30 or 40 feet (12 m) from a swamp and then fly away. On investigating he found a nearly circular area 32 feet long by 25 feet wide where the grass was flattened in clockwise curves to water level within the circle, and the reeds had been uprooted from the mud.[21] The local police officer, the Royal Australian Air Force, and the University of Queensland concluded that it was most probably caused by natural causes, like a down draught, a willy-willy (dust devil), or a waterspout. In 1973, G.J. Odgers, Director of Public Relations, Department of Defence (Air Office), wrote to a journalist that the "saucer" was probably debris lifted by the causing willy-willy.

British pranksters Doug Bower and Dave Chorley claim to have started creating crop circles in British cornfields in 1978, inspired by the Tully "saucer nest" case..[13][21][23][24][25][26]

The first film to depict a geometric crop circle, in this case created by super-intelligent ants, is the 1974 science-fiction film Phase IV. The film has been cited as a possible inspiration or influence on the pranksters who started this phenomenon.[27]

Since the 1960s, there has been a surge of UFOlogists in Wiltshire, and there were rumours of "saucer nests" appearing in the area, but they were never photographed.[25] There are other pre-1970s reports of circular formations, especially in Australia and Canada, but they were always simple circles, which could have been caused by whirlwinds.[21] In Fortean Times David Wood reported that in 1940 he had already made crop circles near Gloucestershire using ropes.[28] In 1997, the Oxford English Dictionary recorded the earliest usage of the term "crop circles" in a 1988 issue of Journal of Meteorology, referring to a BBC film.[29] The coining of the term "crop circle" is attributed to Colin Andrews in the late 1970s or early 1980s.[30][31]

The majority of reports of crop circles have appeared and spread since the late 1970s[13] as many circles began appearing throughout the English countryside. This phenomenon became widely known in the late 1980s, after the media started to report crop circles in Hampshire and Wiltshire. After Bower's and Chorley's 1991 statement that they were responsible for many of them, circles started appearing all over the world.[10] To date, approximately 10,000 crop circles have been reported internationally, from locations such as the former Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, Japan, the U.S., and Canada. Sceptics note a correlation between crop circles, recent media coverage, and the absence of fencing and/or anti-trespassing legislation.[32]

Although farmers expressed concern at the damage caused to their crops, local response to the appearance of crop circles was often enthusiastic, with locals taking advantage of the increase of tourism and visits from scientists, crop circle researchers, and individuals seeking spiritual experiences.[24] The market for crop-circle interest consequently generated bus or helicopter tours of circle sites, walking tours, T-shirts, and book sales.

21st century

Since the start of the 21st century, crop formations have increased in size and complexity, with some featuring as many as 2,000 different shapes[10] and some incorporating complex mathematical and scientific characteristics.[33][34][35]

The researcher Jeremy Northcote found that crop circles in the UK in 2002, were not spread randomly across the landscape. They tended to appear near roads, areas of medium-to-dense population, and cultural heritage monuments such as Stonehenge or Avebury. He found that they always appeared in areas that were easy to access. This suggests strongly that these crop circles were more likely to be caused by intentional human action than by paranormal activity. Another strong indication of that theory was that inhabitants of the zone with the most circles had a historical tendency for making large-scale formations, including stone circles such as Stonehenge, burial mounds such as Silbury Hill, long barrows such as West Kennet Long Barrow, and white horses in chalk hills.[8]

Bower and Chorley

In 1991, two self-professed pranksters, Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, made headlines by claiming that it was they who started the phenomenon in 1978 with the use of simple tools consisting of a plank of wood, rope, and a baseball cap fitted with a loop of wire to help them walk in straight lines.[36] To prove their case they made a circle in front of journalists; a "cereologist" (advocate of paranormal explanations of crop circles), Pat Delgado, examined the circle and declared it authentic before it was revealed that it was a hoax.[9][36][37] Inspired by Australian crop circle accounts from 1966, Bower and Chorley claimed to be responsible for all circles made prior to 1987, and for more than 200 crop circles in 1978–1991 (with 1,000 other circles not being made by them).[10][38] Writing in Physics World, Richard Taylor of the University of Oregon said that "the pictographs they created inspired a second wave of crop artists. Far from fizzling out, crop circles have evolved into an international phenomenon, with hundreds of sophisticated pictographs now appearing annually around the globe."[10]

Art and business

After reports of simple circles in the 1970s, increasingly complex geometric designs have been created by anonymous artists, in some cases to attract tourists to an area.[39]

Since the early 1990s, the UK arts collective Circlemakers, founded by Rod Dickinson and John Lundberg, and subsequently including Wil Russell and Rob Irving, has been creating crop circles in the UK and around the world as part of its art practice and also for commercial clients.[40]

The Led Zeppelin Boxed Set that was released on 7 September 1990, along with the remasters of the first boxed set, as well as the second boxed set, all feature an image of a crop circle that appeared in East Field in Alton Barnes, Wiltshire.

 
Aerial view of a crop circle in Diessenhofen

On the night of 11–12 July 1992, a crop-circle-making competition with a prize of £3,000[41] (funded in part by the Arthur Koestler Foundation) was held in Berkshire. The winning entry was produced by three Westland Helicopters engineers, using rope, PVC pipe, a plank, string, a telescopic device and two stepladders.[42] According to Rupert Sheldrake, the competition was organised by him and John Michell and "co-sponsored by The Guardian and The Cerealogist". The prize money came from PM, a German magazine. Sheldrake wrote that "The experiment was conclusive. Humans could indeed make all the features of state-of-the-art crop formations at that time. Eleven of the twelve teams made more or less impressive formations that followed the set design."[43]

In 2002, Discovery Channel commissioned five aeronautics and astronautics graduate students from MIT to create crop circles of their own, aiming to duplicate some of the features claimed to distinguish "real" crop circles from the known fakes such as those created by Bower and Chorley. The creation of the circle was recorded and used in the Discovery Channel documentary Crop Circles: Mysteries in the Fields.[44]

In 2009, The Guardian reported that crop circle activity had been waning around Wiltshire, in part because makers preferred creating promotional crop circles for companies that paid well for their efforts.[45]

A video sequence used in connection with the opening of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London showed two crop circles in the shape of the Olympic rings. Another Olympic crop circle was visible to passengers landing at nearby Heathrow Airport before and during the Games.[46]

A 7-acre (2.8-hectare) crop circle depicting the emblem of the Star Wars Rebel Alliance was created in California in December 2017 by a father and his 11-year-old son as a spaceport for X-wing fighters.[47]

Legal implications

In 1992, Gábor Takács and Róbert Dallos, both then aged 17, were the first people to face legal action after creating a crop circle. Takács and Dallos, of the St. Stephen Agricultural Technicum, a high school in Hungary specializing in agriculture, created a 36-metre (118 ft) diameter crop circle in a wheat field near Székesfehérvár, 43 miles (69 km) southwest of Budapest, on June 8, 1992. On September 3 the pair appeared on Hungarian TV and exposed the circle as a hoax, showing photos of the field before and after the circle was made. As a result, Aranykalász Co., the owners of the land, sued the teens for 630,000 Ft (~$3,000 USD) in damages. The presiding judge ruled that the students were only responsible for the damage caused in the circle itself, amounting to about 6,000 Ft (~$30 USD), and that 99% of the damage to the crops was caused by the thousands of visitors who flocked to Székesfehérvár following the media's promotion of the circle. The fine was eventually paid by the TV show, as were the students' legal fees.[citation needed]

In 2000, Matthew Williams became the first man in the UK to be arrested for causing criminal damage after making a crop circle near Devizes.[48] In November 2000, he was fined £100 and £40 in costs.[49][50] As of 2008, no one else has been successfully prosecuted in the UK for criminal damage caused by creating crop circles.[n 3]

Creation

 
Detail of a crop circle in a field in Switzerland

The scientific consensus on crop circles is that they are constructed by human beings as hoaxes, advertising, or art.[52] The most widely known method for a person or group to construct a crop formation is to tie one end of a rope to an anchor point and the other end to a board which is used to crush the plants. Skeptics of the paranormal point out that all characteristics of crop circles are fully compatible with their being made by hoaxers.[53]

Bower and Chorley confessed in 1991 to making the first crop circles in southern England.[10] When some people refused to believe them, they deliberately added straight lines and squares to show that they could not have natural causes. In a copycat effect, increasingly complex circles started appearing in many countries around the world, including fractal figures. Physicists have suggested that the most complex formations might be made with the help of GPS and lasers. In 2009, a circle formation was made over the course of three consecutive nights and was apparently left unfinished, with some half-made circles.[10]

The main criticism of alleged non-human creation of crop circles is that while evidence of these origins, besides eyewitness testimonies, is essentially absent, some are definitely known to be the work of human pranksters, and others can be adequately explained as such. There have been cases in which researchers declared crop circles to be "the real thing", only to be confronted with the people who created the circle and documented the fraud,[54] like Bower and Chorley and tabloid Today hoaxing Pat Delgado,[36][55] the Wessex Sceptics and Channel 4's Equinox hoaxing Terence Meaden,[38][55] or a friend of a Canadian farmer hoaxing a field researcher of the Canadian Crop Circle Research Network.[56] In his 1997 book The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, Carl Sagan concludes that crop circles were created by Bower and Chorley and their copycats, and speculates that UFOlogists willingly ignore the evidence for hoaxing so they can keep believing in an extraterrestrial origin of the circles.[57] Many others have demonstrated how complex crop circles can be created.[58] Scientific American published an article by Matt Ridley,[38] who started making crop circles in northern England in 1991. He wrote about how easy it is to develop techniques using simple tools that can easily fool later observers. He reported on "expert" sources such as The Wall Street Journal, who had been easily fooled and mused about why people want to believe supernatural explanations for phenomena that are not yet explained. Methods of creating a crop circle are now well documented on the Internet.[citation needed]

Some crop formations are paid for by companies who use them as advertising.[45][n 3] Many crop circles show human symbols, like the heart and arrow symbol of love, and stereotyped alien faces.[n 4]

Hoaxers have been caught in the process of making new circles, such as in 2004 in the Netherlands for example[59] (see more cases in "legal implications" section above).

Advocates of non-human causes discount on-site evidence of human involvement as attempts to discredit the phenomena.[59] Some even argue a conspiracy theory, with governments planting evidence of hoaxing to muddle the origins of the circles.[59][60] When Ridley wrote negative articles in newspapers, he was accused of spreading "government disinformation" and of working for the UK military intelligence service MI5.[38] Ridley responded by noting that many cereologists make good livings from selling books and providing high-priced personal tours through crop fields, and he claimed that they have vested interests in rejecting what is by far the most likely explanation for the circles.[38][61]

In science magazines from the 1980s and 1990s, for example Science Illustrated, one could read reports suggesting that the plants were bent by something that could be microwave radiation, rather than broken by physical impact. The magazines also contained serious reports of the absence of human influence and measurement of unusual radiation. Today, this is considered to be pseudoscience, while at the time it was subject of serious research. At that time, it was also more likely that an unknown factor was behind the incidents, not least seen in light of the fact that GPS was not available to the public.[62]

Related art

Patterns similar to crop circles can also be made in snow, by using skis, snow shoes or just walking with ordinary shoes. [63]

Patterns similar to crop circles can also be made in sand. [64]

Images can be made in forests by cutting trees, especially in areas with snow. Celebrating the Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway in 1994, a 360 meter tall stylized image of an Olympic torch runner was made in a forest close to one of the arenas. [65]

Alternative explanations

Weather

It has been suggested that crop circles may be the result of extraordinary meteorological phenomena ranging from freak tornadoes to ball lightning, but there is no evidence of any crop circle being created by any of these causes.[10][53]

In 1880, an amateur scientist, John Rand Capron, wrote a letter to the editor of journal Nature about some circles in crops and blamed them on a recent storm, saying their shape was "suggestive of some cyclonic wind action".[n 2]

In 1980, Terence Meaden, a meteorologist and physicist, proposed that the circles were caused by whirlwinds whose course was affected by southern England hills.[10] As circles became more complex, Terence had to create increasingly complex theories, blaming an electromagneto-hydrodynamic "plasma vortex".[10] The meteorological theory became popular, and it was even referenced in 1991 by physicist Stephen Hawking who said that, "Corn circles are either hoaxes or formed by vortex movement of air".[10] The weather theory suffered a serious blow in 1991, but Hawking's point about hoaxes was supported when Bower and Chorley stated that they had been responsible for making all those circles.[n 5] By the end of 1991 Meaden conceded that those circles that had complex designs were made by hoaxers.[67]

Paranormal

 
Sketch of a "spaceship" creating crop circles, sent to UK Ministry of Defence circa 1998.

Since becoming the focus of widespread media attention in the 1980s, crop circles have become the subject of speculation by various paranormal, ufological, and anomalistic investigators ranging from proposals that they were created by bizarre meteorological phenomena to messages from extraterrestrial beings.[53][68][69][70] There has also been speculation that crop circles have a relation to ley lines.[69][71][72] Many New Age groups incorporate crop circles into their belief systems.

Some paranormal advocates think that crop circles are caused by ball lighting and that the patterns are so complex that they have to be controlled by some entity.[73] Some proposed entities are: Gaia asking to stop global warming and human pollution, God, supernatural beings (for example Indian devas), the collective minds of humanity through a proposed "quantum field", or extraterrestrial beings.[73]

Responding to local beliefs that "extraterrestrial beings" in UFOs were responsible for crop circles appearing, the Indonesian National Institute of Aeronautics and Space (LAPAN) described crop circles as "man-made". Thomas Djamaluddin, research professor of astronomy and astrophysics at LAPAN stated, "We have come to agree that this 'thing' cannot be scientifically proven." Among others, paranormal enthusiasts, ufologists, and anomalistic investigators have offered hypothetical explanations that have been criticized as pseudoscientific by sceptical groups and scientists, including the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry.[45][74][75][76] No credible evidence of extraterrestrial origin has been presented.

Animal activity

In 2009, the attorney general for the island state of Tasmania stated that Australian wallabies had been found creating crop circles in fields of opium poppies, which are grown legally for medicinal use, after consuming some of the opiate-laden poppies and running in circles.[77]

Changes to crops

A small number of scientists (physicist Eltjo Haselhoff, the late biophysicist William Levengood) have found differences between the crops inside the circles and outside them, citing this as evidence they were not man-made.[10][53]

Levengood published papers in journal Physiologia Plantarum in 1994[75] and 1999.[78] In his 1994 paper he found that certain deformities in the grain inside the circles were correlated to the position of the grain inside the circle.[53] In 1996 sceptic Joe Nickell objected that correlation is not causation,[53] raised several objections to Levengood's methods and assumptions,[74] and said "Until his work is independently replicated by qualified scientists doing 'double-blind' studies and otherwise following stringent scientific protocols, there seems no need to take seriously the many dubious claims that Levengood makes, including his similar ones involving plants at alleged 'cattle mutilation' sites." (in reference to cattle mutilation).[74]

Magnetism

In 2000, Colin Andrews, who had researched crop circles for 17 years, stated that while he believed 80% were man-made, he thought the remaining circles, with less elaborate designs, could be explained by a three-degree shift in the Earth's magnetic field, that creates a current that "electrocutes" the crops, causing them to flatten and form the circle.[52]

Folklore

Researchers of crop circles have linked modern crop circles to old folkloric tales to support the claim that they are not artificially produced.[13] Crop circles are culture-dependent: they appear mostly in developed and secularized Western countries where people are receptive to New Age beliefs, including Japan, but they don't appear at all in other zones, such as Muslim countries.[79]

Fungi can cause circular areas of crop to die, probably the origin of tales of "fairie rings".[13] Tales also mention balls of light many times but never in relation to crop circles.[13]

 
1678 pamphlet on the "Mowing-Devil".

A 17th-century English woodcut called the Mowing-Devil depicts the devil with a scythe mowing (cutting) a circular design in a field of oats. The pamphlet containing the image states that the farmer, disgusted at the wage his mower was demanding for his work, insisted that he would rather have "the devil himself" perform the task. Crop circle researcher Jim Schnabel does not consider this to be a historical precedent for crop circles because the stalks were cut down, not bent.[13] The circular form indicated to the farmer that it had been caused by the devil.[13]

In the 1948 German story Die zwölf Schwäne (The Twelve Swans), a farmer every morning found a circular ring of flattened grain on his field. After several attempts, his son saw twelve princesses disguised as swans, who took off their disguises and danced in the field. Crop rings produced by fungi may have inspired such tales since folklore holds these rings are created by dancing wolves or fairies.[13]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Keving Greene wrote,

    The difficulties that exist in communicating the results of archaeology have undoubtedly contributed to the flourishing of writers, such as Erich von Däniken, who take a particular delight in deriding the inability of 'experts' to find explanations that seize the imagination of the public. (...) Few archaeologists have sold as many paperbacks as von Däniken; more recently, a meteorologist who linked crop circles to prehistoric ring-ditches or round barrows generated a reaction that no orthodox student of these monuments has ever achieved (Meaden 1991) [in reference to T. Meaden (1991). The Goddess of the Stones: The Language of the Megaliths. London: Souvenir Press.][16]

  2. ^ a b John Rand Capron wrote,

    The storms about this part of Surrey have been lately local and violent, and the effects produced in some instances curious. Visiting a neighbour's farm on Wednesday evening (21st), we found a field of standing wheat considerably knocked about, not as an entirety, but in patches forming, as viewed from a distance, circular spots (...) they all presented much the same character, viz, a few standing stalks as a centre, some prostrate stalks with their heads arranged pretty evenly in a direction forming a circle round the centre, and outside there a circular wall of stalks which had not suffered. (...) I could not trace locally any circumstances accounting for the peculiar forms of the patches in the field, nor indicating whether it was wind or rain, or both combined, which had caused them, beyond the general evidence everywhere of heavy rainfall. They were suggestive to me of some cyclonic wind action, and may perhaps have been noticed elsewhere by some of your readers.[17]

  3. ^ a b In a newspaper article Lewis Cohen wrote, "Williams is probably best known as the only person in the UK to be successfully prosecuted for making crop circles. He has since made a name for himself creating crop circles for TV companies and commercial firms..."[51]
  4. ^ The website Crop Circle Research.com described one formation stating, "It looks reminiscent of a fake dummy constructed by 'Balok' in a Star Trek episode called 'Corbomite Manourvre' [sic] (series 1)' or the logo of local soccer club Feyenoord".[59]
  5. ^ In a Physics World article Richard Taylor wrote, "Today, with the benefit of hindsight, such explanations sound rather contrived. At the height of the debate, though, no less a physicist than Stephen Hawking was prepared to accept some version of Meaden's theory. When a spate of circles appeared in the countryside near his Cambridge home in 1991, Hawking told a local newspaper that "crop circles are either hoaxes or formed by vortex movement of air"[66]

References

  1. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries - English. Archived from the original on 6 February 2015.
  2. ^ Colin Andrews, Pat Delgado Circular Evidence: A Detailed Investigation of the Flattened Swirled Crops. Phanes Press, 1991. ISBN 0-7475-0635-3
  3. ^ Edis, Taner. Science and Nonbelief. Prometheus Books. 2008, p. 138. ISBN 1-59102-561-3 "Skeptics begin by pointing out that many paranormal claims are the result of fraud or hoaxes. Crop circles—elaborate patterns that appear on fields overnight—appear to be of this sort. Many crop circle makers have come forth or have been exposed. We know a great deal about their various techniques. So we do not need to find the perpetrator of every crop circle to figure out that probably they all are human made. Many true believers remain who continue to think there is something paranormal—perhaps alien—about crop circles. But the circles we know all fall within the range of the sort of thing done in hoaxes. Nothing stands out as extraordinary."
  4. ^ Parker, Martin (2000). "Human science as conspiracy theory". The Sociological Review. Wiley Online Library. 48 (S2): 191–207. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954x.2000.tb03527.x. S2CID 145482575.
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  9. ^ a b William E. Schmidt (10 September 1991). "2 'Jovial Con Men' Demystify Those Crop Circles in Britain". The New York Times.
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  18. ^ Sussex Notes and Queries, 1937 Eliot Cecil Curwen pp. 139–40
  19. ^ Moore P. 'That Wiltshire Crater' Letter to the editor New Scientist 8 August 1963

    In the adjoining wheatfields were other features, taking the form of circular or elliptical areas in which the wheat had been flattened. I saw these myself; they had not been much visited, and were certainly peculiar One, very well-defined, was an oval 15 yards long by 41 broad. There was evidence of "spiral flattening", and in one case there was a circular area in the centre in which the wheat had not been flattened. In no case was there any evidence of an actual depression in the ground. (...) [The crater] could have been caused by natural subsidence, but it did not give that impression, and in any case there are the areas of flattened wheat to be taken into account; it would be remarkable coincidence if these areas were not associated with the crater. Since the areas of flattened wheat "led" to the crater, it looks very much as though they, and the crater, were caused by something which came from the sky. In this case, the wheat would have been flattened by violent air-currents produced by the falling body.

  20. ^ Hugh Ernest Butler 'That Wiltshire Crater', New Scientist issue 352, 15 August 1963 Letters to the editor
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Further reading

  • Delgado, Pat & Andrews, Colin (1989). Circular Evidence. London: Guild. ISBN 978-0-933999-95-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Dunning, Brian (22 August 2007). "Skeptoid #62: Crop Circle Jerks". Skeptoid.
  • Glickman, Michael (2009). Crop Circles: The Bones of God. Frog Books. ISBN 978-1-58394-228-4.
  • Noyes, Ralph, ed. (1990). The Crop Circle Enigma: Grounding the Phenomenon in Science, Culture and Metaphysics. Bath: Gateway Books. ISBN 0-946551-66-9.
  • Schnabel, Jim (1993). Round in Circles: Physicists, Poltergeists, Pranksters, and the Secret History of the Cropwatchers. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-017952-6.
  • Taylor, Richard (2010). "The crop circle evolves". Nature. 465 (7299): 693. Bibcode:2010Natur.465..693T. doi:10.1038/465693a.
  • Taylor, Suzanne (2011). What On Earth? Inside the Crop Circle Mystery (DVD 81-minute feature). UBC. ASIN B00468JOFE.

External links

  • Robin, Jean-Baptiste (2012). Crop Circles for large orchestra. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.
  • "Temporary Temples". temporarytemples.co.uk. Website with pictures, since 1994, of crop circles in the UK.
  • The Beautiful World of Crop Circles. YouTube. Archived from the original on 11 December 2021.

crop, circle, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, irrigation, method, that, produces, circular, fields, crops, center, pivot, irrigation, crop, circle, crop, formation, corn, circle, pattern, created, flattening, crop, usually, cereal, term, first, c. Crop circles redirects here For other uses see Crop circles disambiguation For the irrigation method that produces circular fields of crops see center pivot irrigation A crop circle crop formation or corn circle is a pattern created by flattening a crop 1 usually a cereal The term was first coined in the early 1980s by Colin Andrews 2 Crop circles have been described as all falling within the range of the sort of thing done in hoaxes by Taner Edis professor of physics at Truman State University 3 Although obscure natural causes or alien origins of crop circles are suggested by fringe theorists 4 there is no scientific evidence for such explanations and all crop circles are consistent with human causation 5 6 7 Aerial view of crop circles in Switzerland The number of reports of crop circles has substantially increased since the 1970s There has been scant scientific study of them Circles in the United Kingdom are not distributed randomly across the landscape but appear near roads areas of medium to dense population and cultural heritage monuments such as Stonehenge or Avebury 8 In 1991 two hoaxers Doug Bower and Dave Chorley took credit for having created many circles throughout England after one of their circles was described by an investigator as impossible for human beings to make 9 Formations are usually created overnight 10 although some are reported to have appeared during the day 11 In contrast to crop circles or crop formations archaeological remains can cause cropmarks in the fields in the shapes of circles and squares but they do not appear overnight and they are always in the same places every year Nearly half of all crop circles found in the UK in 2003 were located within a 15 kilometres 9 3 mi radius of the Avebury stone circles 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Before the 20th century 1 2 20th century 1 3 21st century 2 Bower and Chorley 3 Art and business 4 Legal implications 5 Creation 6 Related art 7 Alternative explanations 7 1 Weather 7 2 Paranormal 7 3 Animal activity 7 4 Changes to crops 7 5 Magnetism 8 Folklore 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditBefore the 20th century Edit A 1678 news pamphlet The Mowing Devil or Strange News Out of Hartfordshire is claimed by some crop circle devotees who to be the first depiction of a crop circle 13 Crop circle researcher Jim Schnabel does not consider it to be a historical precedent because it describes the stalks as being cut rather than bent 13 see folklore section In 1686 an English naturalist Robert Plot reported on rings or arcs of mushrooms see fairy rings in The Natural History of Stafford Shire and proposed air flows from the sky as a cause 14 15 In 1991 meteorologist Terence Meaden linked this report with modern crop circles a claim that has been compared with those made by Erich von Daniken n 1 An 1880 letter to the editor of Nature by amateur scientist John Rand Capron describes how several circles of flattened crops in a field were formed under suspicious circumstances and possibly caused by cyclonic wind action stating as viewed from a distance circular spots they all presented much the same character viz a few standing stalks as a centre some prostrate stalks with their heads arranged pretty evenly in a direction forming a circle round the centre and outside there a circular wall of stalks which had not suffered n 2 20th century Edit In 1932 the archaeologist E C Curwen observed four dark rings in a field at Stoughton Down near Chichester but could examine only one a circle in which the barley was lodged or beaten down while the interior area was very slightly mounded up 18 In 1963 Patrick Moore described a crater in a potato field in Wiltshire that he considered was probably caused by an unknown meteoric body In nearby wheat fields there were several circular and elliptical areas where the wheat had been flattened There was evidence of spiral flattening He thought they could be caused by air currents from the impact since they led towards the crater 19 Astronomer Hugh Ernest Butler observed similar craters and said they were likely caused by lightning strikes 20 During the 1960s there were many reports of UFO sightings and circular formations in swamp reeds and sugarcane fields in Tully Queensland Australia and in Canada 21 For example on 8 August 1967 three circles were found in a field in Duhamel Alberta Canada Department of National Defence investigators concluded that it was artificial but couldn t say who made them or how 22 The most famous case is the 1966 Tully saucer nest when a farmer said he witnessed a saucer shaped craft rise 30 or 40 feet 12 m from a swamp and then fly away On investigating he found a nearly circular area 32 feet long by 25 feet wide where the grass was flattened in clockwise curves to water level within the circle and the reeds had been uprooted from the mud 21 The local police officer the Royal Australian Air Force and the University of Queensland concluded that it was most probably caused by natural causes like a down draught a willy willy dust devil or a waterspout In 1973 G J Odgers Director of Public Relations Department of Defence Air Office wrote to a journalist that the saucer was probably debris lifted by the causing willy willy British pranksters Doug Bower and Dave Chorley claim to have started creating crop circles in British cornfields in 1978 inspired by the Tully saucer nest case 13 21 23 24 25 26 The first film to depict a geometric crop circle in this case created by super intelligent ants is the 1974 science fiction film Phase IV The film has been cited as a possible inspiration or influence on the pranksters who started this phenomenon 27 Since the 1960s there has been a surge of UFOlogists in Wiltshire and there were rumours of saucer nests appearing in the area but they were never photographed 25 There are other pre 1970s reports of circular formations especially in Australia and Canada but they were always simple circles which could have been caused by whirlwinds 21 In Fortean Times David Wood reported that in 1940 he had already made crop circles near Gloucestershire using ropes 28 In 1997 the Oxford English Dictionary recorded the earliest usage of the term crop circles in a 1988 issue of Journal of Meteorology referring to a BBC film 29 The coining of the term crop circle is attributed to Colin Andrews in the late 1970s or early 1980s 30 31 The majority of reports of crop circles have appeared and spread since the late 1970s 13 as many circles began appearing throughout the English countryside This phenomenon became widely known in the late 1980s after the media started to report crop circles in Hampshire and Wiltshire After Bower s and Chorley s 1991 statement that they were responsible for many of them circles started appearing all over the world 10 To date approximately 10 000 crop circles have been reported internationally from locations such as the former Soviet Union the United Kingdom Japan the U S and Canada Sceptics note a correlation between crop circles recent media coverage and the absence of fencing and or anti trespassing legislation 32 Although farmers expressed concern at the damage caused to their crops local response to the appearance of crop circles was often enthusiastic with locals taking advantage of the increase of tourism and visits from scientists crop circle researchers and individuals seeking spiritual experiences 24 The market for crop circle interest consequently generated bus or helicopter tours of circle sites walking tours T shirts and book sales 21st century Edit Since the start of the 21st century crop formations have increased in size and complexity with some featuring as many as 2 000 different shapes 10 and some incorporating complex mathematical and scientific characteristics 33 34 35 The researcher Jeremy Northcote found that crop circles in the UK in 2002 were not spread randomly across the landscape They tended to appear near roads areas of medium to dense population and cultural heritage monuments such as Stonehenge or Avebury He found that they always appeared in areas that were easy to access This suggests strongly that these crop circles were more likely to be caused by intentional human action than by paranormal activity Another strong indication of that theory was that inhabitants of the zone with the most circles had a historical tendency for making large scale formations including stone circles such as Stonehenge burial mounds such as Silbury Hill long barrows such as West Kennet Long Barrow and white horses in chalk hills 8 Bower and Chorley EditIn 1991 two self professed pranksters Doug Bower and Dave Chorley made headlines by claiming that it was they who started the phenomenon in 1978 with the use of simple tools consisting of a plank of wood rope and a baseball cap fitted with a loop of wire to help them walk in straight lines 36 To prove their case they made a circle in front of journalists a cereologist advocate of paranormal explanations of crop circles Pat Delgado examined the circle and declared it authentic before it was revealed that it was a hoax 9 36 37 Inspired by Australian crop circle accounts from 1966 Bower and Chorley claimed to be responsible for all circles made prior to 1987 and for more than 200 crop circles in 1978 1991 with 1 000 other circles not being made by them 10 38 Writing in Physics World Richard Taylor of the University of Oregon said that the pictographs they created inspired a second wave of crop artists Far from fizzling out crop circles have evolved into an international phenomenon with hundreds of sophisticated pictographs now appearing annually around the globe 10 Art and business EditAfter reports of simple circles in the 1970s increasingly complex geometric designs have been created by anonymous artists in some cases to attract tourists to an area 39 Since the early 1990s the UK arts collective Circlemakers founded by Rod Dickinson and John Lundberg and subsequently including Wil Russell and Rob Irving has been creating crop circles in the UK and around the world as part of its art practice and also for commercial clients 40 The Led Zeppelin Boxed Set that was released on 7 September 1990 along with the remasters of the first boxed set as well as the second boxed set all feature an image of a crop circle that appeared in East Field in Alton Barnes Wiltshire Aerial view of a crop circle in Diessenhofen On the night of 11 12 July 1992 a crop circle making competition with a prize of 3 000 41 funded in part by the Arthur Koestler Foundation was held in Berkshire The winning entry was produced by three Westland Helicopters engineers using rope PVC pipe a plank string a telescopic device and two stepladders 42 According to Rupert Sheldrake the competition was organised by him and John Michell and co sponsored by The Guardian and The Cerealogist The prize money came from PM a German magazine Sheldrake wrote that The experiment was conclusive Humans could indeed make all the features of state of the art crop formations at that time Eleven of the twelve teams made more or less impressive formations that followed the set design 43 In 2002 Discovery Channel commissioned five aeronautics and astronautics graduate students from MIT to create crop circles of their own aiming to duplicate some of the features claimed to distinguish real crop circles from the known fakes such as those created by Bower and Chorley The creation of the circle was recorded and used in the Discovery Channel documentary Crop Circles Mysteries in the Fields 44 In 2009 The Guardian reported that crop circle activity had been waning around Wiltshire in part because makers preferred creating promotional crop circles for companies that paid well for their efforts 45 A video sequence used in connection with the opening of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London showed two crop circles in the shape of the Olympic rings Another Olympic crop circle was visible to passengers landing at nearby Heathrow Airport before and during the Games 46 A 7 acre 2 8 hectare crop circle depicting the emblem of the Star Wars Rebel Alliance was created in California in December 2017 by a father and his 11 year old son as a spaceport for X wing fighters 47 Legal implications EditIn 1992 Gabor Takacs and Robert Dallos both then aged 17 were the first people to face legal action after creating a crop circle Takacs and Dallos of the St Stephen Agricultural Technicum a high school in Hungary specializing in agriculture created a 36 metre 118 ft diameter crop circle in a wheat field near Szekesfehervar 43 miles 69 km southwest of Budapest on June 8 1992 On September 3 the pair appeared on Hungarian TV and exposed the circle as a hoax showing photos of the field before and after the circle was made As a result Aranykalasz Co the owners of the land sued the teens for 630 000 Ft 3 000 USD in damages The presiding judge ruled that the students were only responsible for the damage caused in the circle itself amounting to about 6 000 Ft 30 USD and that 99 of the damage to the crops was caused by the thousands of visitors who flocked to Szekesfehervar following the media s promotion of the circle The fine was eventually paid by the TV show as were the students legal fees citation needed In 2000 Matthew Williams became the first man in the UK to be arrested for causing criminal damage after making a crop circle near Devizes 48 In November 2000 he was fined 100 and 40 in costs 49 50 As of 2008 update no one else has been successfully prosecuted in the UK for criminal damage caused by creating crop circles n 3 Creation Edit Detail of a crop circle in a field in Switzerland The scientific consensus on crop circles is that they are constructed by human beings as hoaxes advertising or art 52 The most widely known method for a person or group to construct a crop formation is to tie one end of a rope to an anchor point and the other end to a board which is used to crush the plants Skeptics of the paranormal point out that all characteristics of crop circles are fully compatible with their being made by hoaxers 53 Bower and Chorley confessed in 1991 to making the first crop circles in southern England 10 When some people refused to believe them they deliberately added straight lines and squares to show that they could not have natural causes In a copycat effect increasingly complex circles started appearing in many countries around the world including fractal figures Physicists have suggested that the most complex formations might be made with the help of GPS and lasers In 2009 a circle formation was made over the course of three consecutive nights and was apparently left unfinished with some half made circles 10 The main criticism of alleged non human creation of crop circles is that while evidence of these origins besides eyewitness testimonies is essentially absent some are definitely known to be the work of human pranksters and others can be adequately explained as such There have been cases in which researchers declared crop circles to be the real thing only to be confronted with the people who created the circle and documented the fraud 54 like Bower and Chorley and tabloid Today hoaxing Pat Delgado 36 55 the Wessex Sceptics and Channel 4 s Equinox hoaxing Terence Meaden 38 55 or a friend of a Canadian farmer hoaxing a field researcher of the Canadian Crop Circle Research Network 56 In his 1997 book The Demon Haunted World Science as a Candle in the Dark Carl Sagan concludes that crop circles were created by Bower and Chorley and their copycats and speculates that UFOlogists willingly ignore the evidence for hoaxing so they can keep believing in an extraterrestrial origin of the circles 57 Many others have demonstrated how complex crop circles can be created 58 Scientific American published an article by Matt Ridley 38 who started making crop circles in northern England in 1991 He wrote about how easy it is to develop techniques using simple tools that can easily fool later observers He reported on expert sources such as The Wall Street Journal who had been easily fooled and mused about why people want to believe supernatural explanations for phenomena that are not yet explained Methods of creating a crop circle are now well documented on the Internet citation needed Some crop formations are paid for by companies who use them as advertising 45 n 3 Many crop circles show human symbols like the heart and arrow symbol of love and stereotyped alien faces n 4 Hoaxers have been caught in the process of making new circles such as in 2004 in the Netherlands for example 59 see more cases in legal implications section above Advocates of non human causes discount on site evidence of human involvement as attempts to discredit the phenomena 59 Some even argue a conspiracy theory with governments planting evidence of hoaxing to muddle the origins of the circles 59 60 When Ridley wrote negative articles in newspapers he was accused of spreading government disinformation and of working for the UK military intelligence service MI5 38 Ridley responded by noting that many cereologists make good livings from selling books and providing high priced personal tours through crop fields and he claimed that they have vested interests in rejecting what is by far the most likely explanation for the circles 38 61 In science magazines from the 1980s and 1990s for example Science Illustrated one could read reports suggesting that the plants were bent by something that could be microwave radiation rather than broken by physical impact The magazines also contained serious reports of the absence of human influence and measurement of unusual radiation Today this is considered to be pseudoscience while at the time it was subject of serious research At that time it was also more likely that an unknown factor was behind the incidents not least seen in light of the fact that GPS was not available to the public 62 Related art EditPatterns similar to crop circles can also be made in snow by using skis snow shoes or just walking with ordinary shoes 63 Patterns similar to crop circles can also be made in sand 64 Images can be made in forests by cutting trees especially in areas with snow Celebrating the Olympic Games in Lillehammer Norway in 1994 a 360 meter tall stylized image of an Olympic torch runner was made in a forest close to one of the arenas 65 Alternative explanations EditWeather Edit It has been suggested that crop circles may be the result of extraordinary meteorological phenomena ranging from freak tornadoes to ball lightning but there is no evidence of any crop circle being created by any of these causes 10 53 In 1880 an amateur scientist John Rand Capron wrote a letter to the editor of journal Nature about some circles in crops and blamed them on a recent storm saying their shape was suggestive of some cyclonic wind action n 2 In 1980 Terence Meaden a meteorologist and physicist proposed that the circles were caused by whirlwinds whose course was affected by southern England hills 10 As circles became more complex Terence had to create increasingly complex theories blaming an electromagneto hydrodynamic plasma vortex 10 The meteorological theory became popular and it was even referenced in 1991 by physicist Stephen Hawking who said that Corn circles are either hoaxes or formed by vortex movement of air 10 The weather theory suffered a serious blow in 1991 but Hawking s point about hoaxes was supported when Bower and Chorley stated that they had been responsible for making all those circles n 5 By the end of 1991 Meaden conceded that those circles that had complex designs were made by hoaxers 67 Paranormal Edit Sketch of a spaceship creating crop circles sent to UK Ministry of Defence circa 1998 Since becoming the focus of widespread media attention in the 1980s crop circles have become the subject of speculation by various paranormal ufological and anomalistic investigators ranging from proposals that they were created by bizarre meteorological phenomena to messages from extraterrestrial beings 53 68 69 70 There has also been speculation that crop circles have a relation to ley lines 69 71 72 Many New Age groups incorporate crop circles into their belief systems Some paranormal advocates think that crop circles are caused by ball lighting and that the patterns are so complex that they have to be controlled by some entity 73 Some proposed entities are Gaia asking to stop global warming and human pollution God supernatural beings for example Indian devas the collective minds of humanity through a proposed quantum field or extraterrestrial beings 73 Responding to local beliefs that extraterrestrial beings in UFOs were responsible for crop circles appearing the Indonesian National Institute of Aeronautics and Space LAPAN described crop circles as man made Thomas Djamaluddin research professor of astronomy and astrophysics at LAPAN stated We have come to agree that this thing cannot be scientifically proven Among others paranormal enthusiasts ufologists and anomalistic investigators have offered hypothetical explanations that have been criticized as pseudoscientific by sceptical groups and scientists including the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry 45 74 75 76 No credible evidence of extraterrestrial origin has been presented Animal activity Edit In 2009 the attorney general for the island state of Tasmania stated that Australian wallabies had been found creating crop circles in fields of opium poppies which are grown legally for medicinal use after consuming some of the opiate laden poppies and running in circles 77 Changes to crops Edit A small number of scientists physicist Eltjo Haselhoff the late biophysicist William Levengood have found differences between the crops inside the circles and outside them citing this as evidence they were not man made 10 53 Levengood published papers in journal Physiologia Plantarum in 1994 75 and 1999 78 In his 1994 paper he found that certain deformities in the grain inside the circles were correlated to the position of the grain inside the circle 53 In 1996 sceptic Joe Nickell objected that correlation is not causation 53 raised several objections to Levengood s methods and assumptions 74 and said Until his work is independently replicated by qualified scientists doing double blind studies and otherwise following stringent scientific protocols there seems no need to take seriously the many dubious claims that Levengood makes including his similar ones involving plants at alleged cattle mutilation sites in reference to cattle mutilation 74 Magnetism Edit In 2000 Colin Andrews who had researched crop circles for 17 years stated that while he believed 80 were man made he thought the remaining circles with less elaborate designs could be explained by a three degree shift in the Earth s magnetic field that creates a current that electrocutes the crops causing them to flatten and form the circle 52 Folklore EditResearchers of crop circles have linked modern crop circles to old folkloric tales to support the claim that they are not artificially produced 13 Crop circles are culture dependent they appear mostly in developed and secularized Western countries where people are receptive to New Age beliefs including Japan but they don t appear at all in other zones such as Muslim countries 79 Fungi can cause circular areas of crop to die probably the origin of tales of fairie rings 13 Tales also mention balls of light many times but never in relation to crop circles 13 1678 pamphlet on the Mowing Devil A 17th century English woodcut called the Mowing Devil depicts the devil with a scythe mowing cutting a circular design in a field of oats The pamphlet containing the image states that the farmer disgusted at the wage his mower was demanding for his work insisted that he would rather have the devil himself perform the task Crop circle researcher Jim Schnabel does not consider this to be a historical precedent for crop circles because the stalks were cut down not bent 13 The circular form indicated to the farmer that it had been caused by the devil 13 In the 1948 German story Die zwolf Schwane The Twelve Swans a farmer every morning found a circular ring of flattened grain on his field After several attempts his son saw twelve princesses disguised as swans who took off their disguises and danced in the field Crop rings produced by fungi may have inspired such tales since folklore holds these rings are created by dancing wolves or fairies 13 See also EditBenjamin Creme Geoglyph Kosmopoisk Land art List of hoaxes Nazca Lines Rice paddy artExplanatory notes Edit Keving Greene wrote The difficulties that exist in communicating the results of archaeology have undoubtedly contributed to the flourishing of writers such as Erich von Daniken who take a particular delight in deriding the inability of experts to find explanations that seize the imagination of the public Few archaeologists have sold as many paperbacks as von Daniken more recently a meteorologist who linked crop circles to prehistoric ring ditches or round barrows generated a reaction that no orthodox student of these monuments has ever achieved Meaden 1991 in reference to T Meaden 1991 The Goddess of the Stones The Language of the Megaliths London Souvenir Press 16 a b John Rand Capron wrote The storms about this part of Surrey have been lately local and violent and the effects produced in some instances curious Visiting a neighbour s farm on Wednesday evening 21st we found a field of standing wheat considerably knocked about not as an entirety but in patches forming as viewed from a distance circular spots they all presented much the same character viz a few standing stalks as a centre some prostrate stalks with their heads arranged pretty evenly in a direction forming a circle round the centre and outside there a circular wall of stalks which had not suffered I could not trace locally any circumstances accounting for the peculiar forms of the patches in the field nor indicating whether it was wind or rain or both combined which had caused them beyond the general evidence everywhere of heavy rainfall They were suggestive to me of some cyclonic wind action and may perhaps have been noticed elsewhere by some of your readers 17 a b In a newspaper article Lewis Cohen wrote Williams is probably best known as the only person in the UK to be successfully prosecuted for making crop circles He has since made a name for himself creating crop circles for TV companies and commercial firms 51 The website Crop Circle Research com described one formation stating It looks reminiscent of a fake dummy constructed by Balok in a Star Trek episode called Corbomite Manourvre sic series 1 or the logo of local soccer club Feyenoord 59 In a Physics World article Richard Taylor wrote Today with the benefit of hindsight such explanations sound rather contrived At the height of the debate though no less a physicist than Stephen Hawking was prepared to accept some version of Meaden s theory When a spate of circles appeared in the countryside near his Cambridge home in 1991 Hawking told a local newspaper that crop circles are either hoaxes or formed by vortex movement of air 66 References Edit crop circle Definition of crop circle in English by Oxford Dictionaries Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on 6 February 2015 Colin Andrews Pat Delgado Circular Evidence A Detailed Investigation of the Flattened Swirled Crops Phanes Press 1991 ISBN 0 7475 0635 3 Edis Taner Science and Nonbelief Prometheus Books 2008 p 138 ISBN 1 59102 561 3 Skeptics begin by pointing out that many paranormal claims are the result of fraud or hoaxes Crop circles elaborate patterns that appear on fields overnight appear to be of this sort Many crop circle makers have come forth or have been exposed We know a great deal about their various techniques So we do not need to find the perpetrator of every crop circle to figure out that probably they all are human made Many true believers remain who continue to think there is something paranormal perhaps alien about crop circles But the circles we know all fall within the range of the sort of thing done in hoaxes Nothing stands out as extraordinary Parker Martin 2000 Human science as conspiracy theory The Sociological Review Wiley Online Library 48 S2 191 207 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954x 2000 tb03527 x S2CID 145482575 Hines T Pseudoscience and the Paranormal Prometheus Books 2003 pp 295 96 ISBN 1 57392 979 4 Soto J Crop Cirles In Michael Shermer ed The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience ABC CLIO pp 67 70 ISBN 1 57607 653 9 Radford B Crop Circles Explained LiveScience a b Jeremy Northcote Spatial distribution of England s crop circles PDF Geography Online Southern Illinois University a b William E Schmidt 10 September 1991 2 Jovial Con Men Demystify Those Crop Circles in Britain The New York Times a b c d e f g h i j k l Richard Taylor August 2011 Coming soon to a field near you PDF Feature Crop circles Physics World Margry amp Roodenburg 2007 pp 140 42 Northcote Jeremy Spatial distribution of England s crop circles PDF Edith Cowan University Australia a b c d e f g h i j Peter Jan Margry Herman Roodenburg 2007 Reframing Dutch Culture Between Otherness and Authenticity Progress in European Ethnology illustrated ed Ashgate Publishing pp 150 51 ISBN 9780754647058 John Aubrey The Natural History of Stafford Shire Archived from the original on 2 April 2007 at Project Gutenberg The Natural History of Staffordshire by Robert Plott Sciotericum Telescopicum or a new Contrivance of adapting a Telescope to a Horizontall Diall for observing the moment of time by day or night by Will Molineux Accounts of Books Philosophical Transactions 16 1686 1692 207 16 1686 JSTOR 101866 Kevin Greene 1995 Archaeology An Introduction The History Principles and Methods of Modern Archaeology PDF 3 fully revised ed Routledge ISBN 0203447204 permanent dead link John Rand Capron 1880 Storm Effects PDF Nature 22 561 290 Bibcode 1880Natur 22 290C doi 10 1038 022290d0 S2CID 4078005 Retrieved from Nature archive for the decade 1880 1889 nature com Nature Retrieved 23 August 2011 Republished in A case of genuine crop circles dating from July 1880 as published in Nature in the year 1880 Journal of Meteorology 25 20 21 January 2000 Sussex Notes and Queries 1937 Eliot Cecil Curwen pp 139 40 Moore P That Wiltshire Crater Letter to the editor New Scientist 8 August 1963 In the adjoining wheatfields were other features taking the form of circular or elliptical areas in which the wheat had been flattened I saw these myself they had not been much visited and were certainly peculiar One very well defined was an oval 15 yards long by 41 broad There was evidence of spiral flattening and in one case there was a circular area in the centre in which the wheat had not been 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1583940464 Jerome Clark Nancy Pear 1995 Strange and Unexplained Happenings When Nature Breaks the Rules of Science Vol 3 Gale ISBN 0810397803 Margry amp Roodenburg 2007 pp 138 39 Charles Godfrey Faussett 2004 England Footprint Travel Guides ISBN 1903471915 a b Margry amp Roodenburg 2007 p 138 a b c Joe Nickell June 1996 Levengood s crop circle plant research Skeptical Inquirer 6 2 Archived from the original on 9 March 2010 Retrieved 31 March 2010 a b W C Levengood 1994 Anatomical anomalies in crop formation plants Physiologia Plantarum 92 2 356 63 doi 10 1111 j 1399 3054 1994 tb05348 x ISSN 0031 9317 Archived from the original on 28 January 2012 Ika Krismantari 6 February 2011 Crop circles provide food for thought The Star Archived from the original on 30 October 2012 Stoned wallabies make crop circles BBC News 25 June 2009 Retrieved 31 May 2011 W C Levengood Nancy P Talbott 1999 Dispersion of energies in worldwide crop formations Physiologia Plantarum 105 4 615 24 doi 10 1034 j 1399 3054 1999 105404 x S2CID 67753725 Margry amp Roodenburg 2007 p 152 Further reading EditDelgado Pat amp Andrews Colin 1989 Circular Evidence London Guild ISBN 978 0 933999 95 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dunning Brian 22 August 2007 Skeptoid 62 Crop Circle Jerks Skeptoid Glickman Michael 2009 Crop Circles The Bones of God Frog Books ISBN 978 1 58394 228 4 Noyes Ralph ed 1990 The Crop Circle Enigma Grounding the Phenomenon in Science Culture and Metaphysics Bath Gateway Books ISBN 0 946551 66 9 Schnabel Jim 1993 Round in Circles Physicists Poltergeists Pranksters and the Secret History of the Cropwatchers Harmondsworth Penguin ISBN 0 14 017952 6 Taylor Richard 2010 The crop circle evolves Nature 465 7299 693 Bibcode 2010Natur 465 693T doi 10 1038 465693a Taylor Suzanne 2011 What On Earth Inside the Crop Circle Mystery DVD 81 minute feature UBC ASIN B00468JOFE External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Crop circles Robin Jean Baptiste 2012 Crop Circles for large orchestra Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Temporary Temples temporarytemples co uk Website with pictures since 1994 of crop circles in the UK The Beautiful World of Crop Circles YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crop circle amp oldid 1130572185, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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