Crop circles

Bollettino informativo in collaborazione con il Centro Ufologico Nazionale
http://web.tiscalinet.it/lareteufo/index.htm
 


Da UFO-Rama,


NOVITA' SUI CERCHI NEL GRANO
--------------------------------------------

Riceviamo e pubblichiamo volentieri dalla redazione di HERA:

> a seguire vi sono i testi con relativi indirizzi (consiglio di darci
> un'occhiata) di due notizie diramate dal sito della BBC in data 9
agosto.
Si
> tratta di una nuova teoria sulla formazione dei Crop Circles basata
sui
> campi magnetici terrestri. Autori Colin Andrews e il CCCRS. Si tratta
di
una
> ipotesi che d? ulteriore valore a quello che ho scritto nel primo
inserto
> pubblicato su HERA e che sar? ulteriormente ripreso nel secondo in
edicola
a
> settembre e gi? in stampa.
> In effetti il campo magnetico sembra possedere un'importanza notevole
nel
> fenomeno e la cimatica ci fornisce la risposta. Le pulsazioni della
Terra
> che erano stabilizzate su un valore di 7.8 cicli al secondo sono
aumentate
e
> quello che molti chiamano il cambio vibrazionale ? in piena
attuazione.
> Infatti ? l'aumentata vibrazione della terra che permette una sempre
> maggiore complessit? delle formazioni al suolo. Hans Jenny scopr?
infatti
> che aumentando la frequenza di pulsazione di una vibrazione diretta su
un
> liquido, le molecole creavano simbologie sempre pi? complesse
all'aumentare
> delle pulsazioni. Da semplici cerchi si passava a simboli tipici della

> geometria sacra. Proprio quanto accaduto al fenomeno "crops" che da
> semplici cerchi negli anni '70 ? passato a manifestare simbologie
complesse
> tipiche della geometria sacra. Sono per? convinto che il campo
magnetico
non
> sia il solo responsabile ma a questo vanno aggiunti altri fattori
quali la
> presenza d'acqua, le microonde, l'energia sonora e campi di plasma.
Chi
vule
> approfondire l'argomzento pu? leggere i miei inserti. Ne ho parlato
nel
> primo inserto sui Cerchi nel Grano e nel secondo in edicola con HERA
di
> settembre.
> Il CICAP pu? accanirsi a chiamare l'intervento di autori di ottimi
falsi.
Il
> fenomeno presenta fattori molto pi? complessi e un buon falso, come
accaduto
> in questi giorni, oltre a non spiegare le restanti migliaia di
formazioni
> autentiche, ? solo una curiosit? in pi? buona per i mass-media. Da
parte
mia
> ? ora che l'argomento venga trattato con seriet? in tutti i suoi
aspetti
e
> sono pronto a qualsiasi cosa purché la realt? di questo fenomeno venga

> presentataa per quello che ?. E' ora di farsi le domande giuste e
fornire
le
> risposte pi? sensate, dato che oggi questa fenomenologia ci ha fornito

tutti
> i presupposti per farlo con cognizione di causa. >
>
> >Subject: Crop Circles & Magnetic Field Theory
> >Date: Thu, 10 Aug 2000 00:42:59 EDT
> >
> >"...The theory could explain why in some circles, microphones and
> >recording equipment hit interference, he says. Some years ago, a
> >BBC crew had difficulty recording in a circle..."
> >
> >"...It doesn't explain why often the nodes of the plants have swollen

> >up to 200 times the original size..."
> >
> >"...He has hired private detectives to track hoaxers and now says he
> >can rule out 80% of the formations. He claims the less elaborate
> >designs are the "natural" creations caused by a three-degree
> >shift in magnetic field lines..."
> >
> >Source: BBC News
> >
> >http://news6.thdo.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/newsid%5F871000/871607.stm
> >
> >Wednesday, 9 August, 2000, 14:42 GMT 15:42 UK
> >
> >Q&A: Crop circles
> >
> >As a new study claims some crop circles are created by shifts in
> >the earth's magnetic field, George Bishop, of the Centre for
> >Crop Circle Studies, expounds on the phenomenon.
> >
> >According to Dr Colin Andrews, who has studied crop circles for
> >17 years, about 20% are caused by eddies in the earth's magnetic
> >field - the rest are man-made. He thinks a mysterious shift in
> >the electro-magnetic field creates a current that flattens the
> >crops in its path.
> >
> >Is it plausible?
> >
> >"Yes - it's a nice rounded theory," says Mr Bishop. Like Dr
> >Andrews, he says all but the simplest circles are hoaxes.
> >
> >The theory could explain why in some circles, microphones and
> >recording equipment hit interference, he says. Some years ago, a
> >BBC crew had difficulty recording in a circle.
> >
> >"If the circles are formed by electro-magnetic eddies, there may
> >be a residual charge of energy," Mr Bishop says.
> >
> >But he does not think the new theory is the final word: "It
> >doesn't explain why often the nodes of the plants have swollen
> >up to 200 times the original size."
> >
> >He thinks the currents may work in tandem with other
> >environmental factors, possibly conducted via water in the air,
> >such as mist, or in underground water tables.
> >
> >Are they only in the UK?
> >
> >No, the circles crop up around the world - in grass as well as
> >grain fields.
> >
> >Why so many in Wiltshire, south England?
> >
> >As an area steeped in the mysteries of the ancients, this is
> >where the hoaxers are most active, and where the majority of
> >enthusiasts go circle spotting.
> >
> >Many more circles around the country and abroad go unseen and
> >unreported, Mr Bishop says.
> >
> >"Ninety percent - and in some years, 98% - of the circles in the
> >UK appear along the aquifer line (a layer of rock able to hold
> >water), which runs from Dorset to Norfolk."
> >
> >When do the circles date from?
> >
> >One of the earliest reports was in Lyon in 815AD, and a late
> >16th Century woodcut depicts the devil mowing a field into
> >patterns.
> >
> >Wiltshire's ancient stone circles - which include Stonehenge and
> >Avebury - could have been built on the sites of early crop
> >circles, Mr Bishop says.
> >
> >What of the other theories - aliens, for example?
> >
> >Aliens are a modern-day obsession, so not surprisingly the
> >circles have been attributed to little green men - either as
> >messages, or the imprint of UFOs landing in the fields.
> >
> >"People relate crop circles to what is going on around them,
> >what concerns them," Mr Bishop says.
> >
> >"People used to think it was witches and fairies; then it was
> >aliens. Today, people think it might be electro-magnetic
> >pollution, caused by the proliferation of radio masts and mobile
> >phones."
> >
> >And ancient ley lines?
> >
> >"It may well be that the earth does have these energy lines, and
> >it may well create some sort of current when these lines
> >intersect with the magnetic fields."
> >
> >What about freak weather patterns?
> >
> >Mini-tornadoes are unlikely to create such intricate and
> >symmetrical patterns, Mr Bishop says: "We know whirlwinds aren't
> >static - they travel around."
> >
> >But this you can guarantee - the circles will crop up again next
> >summer.
>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
> >Source: BBC News
> >
>
>http://news6.thdo.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid%5F872000/872142.stm

> >
> >Wednesday, 9 August, 2000, 14:43 GMT 15:43 UK
> >
> >Magnetic 'Solution' To Crop Circle Puzzle
> >
> >Colin Andrews has researched crop circles since the 80s Research
> >into the appearance of crop circles in summer fields claims the
> >strange phenomena are caused by the Earth's magnetic field.
> >
> >Scientist Colin Andrews says 17 years of work has revealed that
> >about 80% of the formations are man-made.
> >
> >But he believes that magnetism may account for the rest, which
> >display a simplicity of form compared with elaborate, beautiful
> >patterns of the "hoaxes".
> >
> >Dr Andrews believes a mysterious shift in the magnetic field
> >gives rise to a current that "electrocutes" the crops forcing
> >them to lie flat on the ground.
> >
> >Summertime feature
> >
> >The known hoaxers, artists who spend hours trampling fields with
> >footboards attached to a length of rope, say the public does not
> >believe in scientific explanations.
> >
> >Crop circles are a regular summertime feature of the UK arable
> >landscape, particularly in Wiltshire and the West Country where
> >there are a number of ancient sites.
> >
> >Designs in the flattened wheat, barley and corn become more
> >elaborate each year, fuelling the debate over who or what is
> >responsible for them.
> >
> >Explanations have ranged from freak weather conditions to alien
> >visitors. But Dr Andrews, funded by a grant from the
> >Rockerfeller Institute in the US, believes he is closer to the
> >truth.
> >
> >'Natural' creations
> >
> >He has hired private detectives to track hoaxers and now says he
> >can rule out 80% of the formations. He claims the less elaborate
> >designs are the "natural" creations caused by a three-degree
> >shift in magnetic field lines.
> >
> >Some claim circles are UFO landing sites Dr Andrews, who plans
> >to publish his findings later this year, says more work still
> >needs to be done his theory.
> >
> >Self-proclaimed hoaxer John Lundberg said no-one would ever
> >believe a scientific explanation for crop circles because people
> >want to believe it is something more mysterious. "The public
> >don't want it explained," he said.
> >
> >Most mainstream scientists believe the only explanation for crop
> >circles lies in the footboards of hoaxers.



(cortesia: Adriano FORGIONE)









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