Crop circle

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A crop circle in Switzerland.

A crop circle[note 1] is a sizable pattern created by the flattening of a crop such as wheat, barley, rye, or maize.[1][2]

In 1991, self-professed pranksters Doug Bower and Dave Chorley stated that they had started the phenomenon in 1978 by making actual circles on crops with the use of simple tools.[3] However, crop patterns did not only persist but became astonishingly complex. Some even came to resemble stereotypical extraterrestrials as portrayed by science fiction movies, fractals and archaeological, religious or mythological symbols, thus leading to speculation and passionate debate. Among others, paranormal enthusiasts, ufologists and anomalistic investigators have offered arousing yet hypothetical explanations that have been criticized as pseudoscientific by skeptical groups like the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry.[4][5][6][7]

While most of the observed patterns have revealed as products of deception, artistic expression and business[8]/tourist[9] interests, some still elude rational or verified explanation, and are dubbed "genuine". Such cases have been examined by a few researches via the scientific method. Nevertheless, the results—including intense electromagnetic radiation as the cause of flattening—generated even further controversy.

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Bower and Chorley

In 1991, two men from Southampton, England, announced that they had conceived the idea as a prank at a pub near Winchester, Hampshire. Inspired by the 1966 Tully Saucer Nests, Doug Bower and Dave Chorley made their crop circles using planks, rope, hats and wire as their only tools: using a four-foot-long plank attached to a rope, they easily created circles eight feet in diameter. The two men were able to make a 40-foot (12 m) circle in 15 minutes.

The pair became frustrated when their work did not receive significant publicity, so in 1981, they created a circle in Matterley Bowl, a natural amphitheatre just outside Winchester, Hampshire—an area surrounded by roads from which a clear view of the field is available to drivers passing by. Their designs were at first simple circles. When newspapers claimed that the circles could easily be explained by natural phenomena, Bower and Chorley made more complex patterns. A simple wire with a loop, hanging down from a cap—the loop positioned over one eye—could be used to focus on a landmark to aid in the creation of straight lines. Later designs of crop circles became increasingly complicated.

Bower's wife had become suspicious of him, noticing high mileage in their car. Eventually, fearing that his wife suspected him of adultery, Bower confessed to her, and subsequently, he and Chorley informed a British national newspaper. Chorley died in 1996, and Doug Bower has made crop circles as recently as 2004. Bower has said that, had it not been for his wife's suspicions, he would have taken the secret to his deathbed, never revealing that it was a hoax.[10]

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".[11]

Scientific American published an article by Matt Ridley,[12] 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 to create a crop circle are now well documented on the internet.[13]

[edit] Art and business

Aerial view of crop circle in Diessenhofen, July 2008

Since the early 1990s the UK arts collective founded by artist John Lundberg, named the Circlemakers, have been creating some crop circles in the UK and around the world both as part of their art practice and for commercial clients.

On the night of July 11–12, 1992, a crop-circle making competition, for a prize of several thousand UK pounds (partly funded by the Arthur Koestler Foundation), was held in Berkshire. The winning entry was produced by three Westland Helicopters engineers, using rope, PVC pipe, a trestle and a ladder. Another competitor used a small garden roller, a plank and some rope.

In a gathering in Switzerland, crop circle artists stated that:[14]

Art is about fooling people to create a sense of awe, beauty or simply a brief, healthy disconnect with ordinary reality.

[edit] Law implications

In 1992 Hungarian youths Gábor Takács and Róbert Dallos, both then 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-meter 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 youngsters for 630,000 HUF (approximately $3000 USD) in damages. The presiding judge ruled that the students were only responsible for the damage caused in the 36-meter diameter circle, amounting to about 6,000 HUF (approximately $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]

[edit] Rockefeller involvement

In 1999, researcher Colin Andrews received funding from Laurence Rockefeller to conduct a two-year investigation into crop circles. His team concluded that 80% of all crop formations that appeared in England throughout 1999 and 2000 were unquestionably man-made and instigated by business and media interests. However the team could not account for the nature of the remaining 20%, which were termed "genuine". Collins stated that he had encountered such "unexplainable" patterns 20 years earlier.[15]

Andrews's figures have been disputed by CSICOP who argue that his criteria for distinguishing between man-made circles and non-man-made circles were insufficient, as no official standard exists for determining the nature of a crop circle. Furthermore, these circles were in England, where the hoax is most operative.[citation needed]

Funding from L. Rockefeller has also led to the creation of the BLT Research team, a group of scientists and researches focused on providing thorough scientific documentation regarding all aspects of crop circle phenomena.

[edit] Explanations

A crop circle in the form of a Triskelion
A 780 ft crop circle in the form of a double (six-sided) triskelion composed of 409 circles. Location: Milk Hill (England), 2001

[edit] State agencies

Some [note 2] have argued that military and/or intelligence institutions are involved in the formation of elaborate and "inexplicable" crop circles. Proponents of this hypothesis hold that such "genuine" patterns are clandestine experiments of technical and/or psychological nature.

Their main points are the following:[14][16][17][18]

High-Power Microwave (HPM) sources have been under investigation for several years as potential weapons for a variety of combat, sabotage, and terrorist applications. Due to classification restrictions, details of this work are relatively unknown outside the military community and its contractors.

[edit] Weather

Some people have suggested that crop circles are the result of extraordinary meteorological phenomena. This hypothesis probably originated from a 1880 publication in Nature by investigator and amateur scientist John Rand Capron. Part of the publication reappeared in the January 2000 issue of Journal of Meteorology:[23][24]

The storms about this part of Western 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... 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...

[edit] Paranormal

Since appearing in the media in the 1970s, 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 extraterrestrials.[25][26][27][28]

The location of many crop circles near ancient sites such as Stonehenge, barrows, and chalk horses has led many New Age belief systems to incorporate crop circles, speculating their existence in relation to ley lines.[25][29][30]

Some New Age supporters have arbitrarily related crop circles to the Gaia hypothesis, alleging that "Gaia", the earth, is actually alive and that crop circles are messages or responses to stimuli such as global warming and human pollution.[16] However, the Gaia hypothesis is actually not a theory of the paranormal, as it originated from academic scientists.[31] It asserts that the earth may be modeled as if a single super-organism, in that earthly components (e.g. biota, climate, temperature, sunlight etc) influence each other and are organized to function and develop as a whole.[32]

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 (see above).[33] Many others have demonstrated how complex crop circles can be created.[13][34] In his 1997 book The Demon-Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark, Carl Sagan discussed alien-based theories of crop circle formation. Sagan concluded that no empirical evidence existed to link UFOs with crop circles. Specifically, he pointed out that there were no credible cases of UFOs being observed creating a circle, yet there were many cases when it was known that human agents, such as Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, were responsible.[35]

[edit] Animal activity

In 2009, BBC News reported that Lara Giddings, the attorney general for the island state of Tasmania, stated that Australian wallabies had been found creating crop circles in fields of poppies after consuming some of the opiate-laden crop and running in circles [36].

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ the term entered the Oxford English Dictionary in 1990
  2. ^ like computer scientist Jacques Vallee in BoingBoing, Stephen Wagner in About.com, Colin Andrews in his book "Government Circles" and Richard D. Hall in his documentary "Crop Circles: The Hidden Truth"

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hillary Mayell Crop Circles: Artworks or Alien Signs?, National Geographic News, August 2, 2002
  2. ^ Rob Irving and Peter Brookesmith Crop Circles: The Art of the Hoax Smithsonian.com, December 15, 2009
  3. ^ Crop Circle Confession; August 2002; Scientific American Magazine; by Matt Ridley
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ http://www.tonyrogers.com/news/levengood_crop_circles.htm
  6. ^ Levengood. W.C. 1994. Anatomical anomalies in crop formation plants. - Physiologia Plantaruni. 92: 356-363.
  7. ^ John Vidal The bizarre revival of crop circles - and advice on how to make your own guardian.co.uk, 5 June 2009 "
  8. ^ http://www.circlemakers.org/hellokitty.html
  9. ^ Vidal, "The bizarre revival...", 5 June 2009. "From being genuinely intriguing, amusing and innocent folk art, the formations have become worth millions of pounds to the Wiltshire tourist industry."
  10. ^ Bower and Chorley's original confession was first reported in Today, September 9, 1991
  11. ^ "Crop Circles: Mysteries in the Fields", Discovery Chanel (first broadcast 2002-10-10)
  12. ^ Ridley, Hola (August 2002). "Crop Circle Confession". Scientific American. http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa006&articleID=00038B16-ED5F-1D29-97CA809EC588EEDF. Retrieved 2007-08-16. 
  13. ^ a b ¤ c i r c l e m a k e r s ¤
  14. ^ a b http://www.boingboing.net/2010/04/28/of-flattened-flora-a.html
  15. ^ http://www.colinandrews.net/Biography.html
  16. ^ a b http://paranormal.about.com/library/weekly/aa080502b.htm
  17. ^ http://www.world-mysteries.com/sci_14.htm
  18. ^ http://ovnis-armee.org/5_crop_circles.htm
  19. ^ http://www.bltresearch.com/fieldreports/uk2009.php
  20. ^ http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/munitions/hpm.htm
  21. ^ http://www.cropfiles.it/docs/Crops-by-Bols.html
  22. ^ http://www.cropcircles.cc/crop-circles-and-mysterious-balls-of-light.html
  23. ^ "A case of genuine crop circles dating from July 1880 – as published in Nature in the year 1880". Journal of Meteorology (ISSN 0307-5966: Volume 25, pp 20–21, Jan. 2000)
  24. ^ "Scientific Viewpoints regarding Crop Circles" at Stonehenge-Avebury.net
  25. ^ a b Haselhoff, Eltjo (2001) "The Deepening Complexity of Crop Circles:Scientific Research & Urban Legends", Frog Ltd, ISBN 1-58394-046-4
  26. ^ Carroll, Robert (2005) "Skeptics Dictionary: Crop Circles", Wiley, ISBN 0-471-27242-6
  27. ^ Clark Jerome (1995) "Strange and Unexplained Happenings", Gale ISBN 0-8103-9780-3
  28. ^ Crop Circles and Their 'Orbs' of Light (Skeptical Inquirer September 2002)
  29. ^ Howarth, Leslie (2000) "If in Doubt, Blame the Aliens!: A new scientific analysis of UFO sightings, alleged alien abductions, animal mutilations and crop circles", iUniverse, ISBN 0-595-15693-2
  30. ^ Godfrey-Faussett, Charles (2004) "England", Footprint Travel Guides, ISBN 1-903471-91-5
  31. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=89GBVioWGUgC&lpg=PP1&dq=Lovelock%2C%20E.%20Gaia%3A%20A%20New%20Look%20at%20Life%20on%20Earth.%20Oxford%3A%20Oxford%20University%20Press&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false
  32. ^ Dictionary of environment and ecology by P. Collin, 5th ed., Bloomsbury Reference, 2004
  33. ^ Joe Nickell, "Crop-Circle Mania: An Investigative Update", Skeptical Inquirer
  34. ^ Faking UFOs, Roel Van der Meulen (Self Published, 1994)
  35. ^ "The Demon Haunted World", Carl Sagan (Random House, January 1996)
  36. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8118257.stm

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links

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