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For over twenty years the normally quaint and quiet English countryside has slowly been
overrun by a phenomenon more akin to It Came From Outer Space than to cream tea. Fields
long accustomed to entertaining wheat, barley, or canola are, with increasing frequency,
playing host to magnificent pictograms in the form of crop circles: areas of flattened
crop as large as 100,000 square feet where plants are bent an inch above soil level and
gently laid down in geometrically-precise pictograms, with no visible signs of damage or
human entry.
But what started as a local phenomenon in the environs of Stonehenge and Silbury Hill
has since become a major British export: to date, some 8,000 crop circles have been
reported worldwide.
If they had their way, certain television documentaries would have you believe that all
crop circles have been nothing more than the work of two simple, elderly men armed with a
plank of wood and a baseball cap fitted with a ludicrous wire attachment which, they
claim, helped make mathematically correct circles and ruler-straight lines in total
darkness.
But in such programs the meat on the bone of research is systematically stripped before
it reaches the table. The public is left to be turned off as the whole phenomenon is
explained through human agency alone. This is why there is so much disbelief, even
hostility, toward crop circles in the public's mind. Yet despite persistent attempts,
researchers, scientists and hoaxers have failed to replicate most phenomena associated
with genuine crop circles: plants bent, not broken or damaged; radically altered
chromosomes; massive depletion of the groundwater; soil element alterations; major
discrepancies in background radiation and electromagnetic fields, dowsable and
long-lasting energy patterns; and so on.
Most disturbing for hoax theory advocates has been the discovery, by Emeritus Professor
of Astronomy Gerald Hawkins, of Euclidean geometry and diatonic ratios present in crop
circles features requiring a understanding beyond basic math and yet to be found in both
controlled man-made designs or in uncontrolled hoaxes.
So much, then, for two guys and a long two-by-four. But what, then, is causing several
thousand square feet of crop to suddenly lay down in designs of immense complexity and
hypnotic beauty?
THE GROUND COMPONENT
When the stems of affected plants are cut, a malty fragrance is detected, suggesting
that they have been cooked from the inside. Yet the stalks remain unharmed. A second
observation reveals that a noticeable amount of ground water in and around crop circles
appears to have vanished (this is corroborated by the author's infrared photographic
analysis). The soil within a formation is generally dry, even cracked, despite overnight
rains. Exhaustive lab analysis into hundreds of crop circles from 1991 to 1995 by
biophysicist Dr. W.C. Levengood reveals physical and biophysical changes in plants inside
crop circles. Their nodes are literally blown open to form expulsion cavities, an effect
unique to crop formations and reproduced in a lab setting through a very rapid rate of
heating. Levengood also discovered alterations in the germination and development of seed
embryos, alterations in plant stem node length and circumference (up to 200% in one case),
and enlarged cell wall pit diameters in bract tissue actions consistent with the
application of intense heat.
This leads to the speculation that the affected plants are microwaved for a very
intense yet brief period. The groundwater is partly vaporized, partly sucked into the
plant, thereby preventing the field from catching fire, while the stems are made supple
enough to bend without cracking, enabling them to be easily manipulated into precise
patterns. But this does not account for the geometric designs.
THE GEOMETRIC COMPONENT
Look through twenty years of aerial photos of these agriglyphs and it is hard to deny
their melodic precision, their circular forms resplendent with abstract, yet harmonic
waves of invisible energy. Hardly surprising, then, to discover crop circle designs
flaunting the principles of sacred geometry, either visually or veiled within the
construction blueprint, much in the same way ancient esoteric knowledge was hidden within
the framework of religious fables or monuments.
In his visionary work, The Sophistication of Agriglyth Geometry, John Martineau was
perhaps the first to visualize this coded information in the early phases of the
phenomenon. My own dissections of aerial photographs also prove the same to be true of
designs in recent years. Even what sometimes appear to be loose or random elements both
within and beyond the perimeter of formations such as small unconnected circles or
grapeshot,' and rectangular boxes are placed along an invisible matrix of pentagonal and
hexagonal alignments based on proportional geometry and Golden Mean ratios.
In Science News (Feb. 1992), Prof. Hawkins went a step further by using the principles
of Euclidean geometry to prove that four theorems could be derived from the relationships
among the elements in crop circles. More significantly, he discovered a fifth theorem from
which he could derive the other four. Despite an open challenge, tens of thousands of
subscribers to both Science News and Mathematics Teacher were unable to create such a
theorem, which Euclid himself had only hinted at twenty-three centuries earlier. It
subsequently appeared as flattened barley at Litchfield, England, in 1995.
THE SOUND COMPONENT
Ancient Greeks once remarked that geometry is frozen music. To their Egyptian teachers,
sacred geometry and music were inextricably linked since the laws of the former govern the
mathematical intervals that make up the notes in the western music scale the diatonic
ratios. Coincidentally, Hawkins' Euclidean theorems had also produced diatonic ratios. So
for the first time, geometric theorems were linked with music and crop circles were proved
to contain musical notes, which are themselves the by-product of the harmonic laws of
sound frequency.
The fields themselves offered blatant clues pointing to a sound component. In 1996 a
crop circle demonstrated the combination of two important figures, the 3, 4, 5 triangle
and the Golden Mean, which gives us the diagram necessary to produce musical ratios (as
exemplified in The Divine Proportion by H.E.Huntley).
Then an outstanding formation at Goodwood Clatford which had its plants bent six inches
from the top gave the proverbial nod to sound. For here was a cymatic pattern in 5,000
square feet of barley, leading straight to a smoking gun.
In 1967, Swiss scientist Hans Jenny published the first of his painstaking studies of
vibrational affects on physical media such as water, plaster, oil and sand cymatics. By
transmitting sound in the shape of a monitored frequency through these elements, he was
able to capture on film the exact geometric pattern that sound makes as its vibrations
move through these substances. Changing the vibration altered the shape of the geometry
captured in the receiving substance a low frequency produced a simple circle encompassed
by a ring, whereas a higher frequency increased the number of concentric rings around a
central circle. As the frequencies rose, so too did the complexity of shapes, to the point
where tetrahedrons, mandalas, and Pythagorean forms were discernible. Jenny not only
managed to solidify sound, he also enabled humanity to observe frozen music.
Jenny also provided a physical connection to the creation of crop circles, since many
of the vibrational patterns found in his photos mimicked their designs. Some were blatant
imitations, such as a circle surrounded by concentric rings from the 80s, the tetrahedron
at Barbury Castle in 1991, the mandalas and spider's web of 1994, even the highly
structured Pythagorean-based star fractals of 1997. Other photos demonstrated the
construction geometry encoded within crop circles but only visible upon dissection of
overhead photographs by compass or computer.
But there is yet another coincidence: the relationship between the rising complexity of
Jenny's cymatic geometries in proportion to the rise of dispensed frequency matches the
historical sequential development of the pictograms. Crop circles began appearing as
simple circles in the '70s and developed in an exponential curve through the 80s and into
today's complex pictograms, much in the same way Jenny's work shows the increase in design
complexity relative to the rise in frequency applied.
This coincidence echoes the repeated claims by many channelers/mediums/sensitive people
at the beginning phase of the phenomenon that the earth is undergoing a change in
frequency a raising in the earth's vibratory rate, a sentiment also shared in the
prophecies of native tribes around the world concerning earth changes of this period.
Further corroboration comes from NASA, whose recent soundings of earth from space record a
rise in the frequency hum' emitted by the planet.
In his extensive database, leading crop circle researcher Colin Andrews notes several
accounts of a trilling sound heard by people prior to witnessing crop circles forming. The
reports describe a total stillness in the air; the morning song of birds stops, proceeded
by a trilling sound and the banging together of wheat heads despite an absence of wind.
The crop then lies down in spiral fashion, the whole episode lasting no more than fifteen
seconds.
This sound was eventually captured on magnetic tape and analyzed at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Lab as mechanical in nature and beating at a frequency of 5.2kHz. The same
sound had been previously heard by a BBC cameraman while recording an interview near a
crop circle, shortly before crossing the formation's threshold, which proceeded to render
two $50,000 TV cameras obsolete. Obviously, if sound is a main component in the creation
of crop circles it can certainly be interacted with.
The formations' physical location may play a part in this. In Dowsing Crop Circles, two
decades of collective research by noted dowsers Richard Andrews and Hamish Miller, among
others, reveals that crop circles have been materializing over major ley lines the earth's
magnetic energy grid or their tributaries. Miller had also observed, together with Paul
Broadhurst in The Sun and the Serpent, how this energy congregates at stone circles and
tumuli. Imagine his surprise to find crop circles energetically linked to these ancient
sites and their magnetic grid.
In noted cases such as the cyclopean triple Julia Set fractal formation at Windmill
Hill in 1996, crop circles appear over the node point where the male and female lines
intersect and discharge dowsable patterns of energy. These invisible fingerprints, which
can last up to a year after all visible signs of the formation have been tilled, were
discovered by Miller to have coherent geometric structures Teutonic crosses, 9-, 10- and
12-pointed stars, the same geometric patterns which formed part of esoteric mathematical
teaching in Egyptian, Buddhist, and Arabic cultures, and since popularized in the West by
Pythagoras.
This relationship between geometry, math, and music is especially important in Buddhist
mandalas, whose elaborate geometries are claimed to be the physical manifestation of
chants which are then used for meditation. In Arabic culture these relationships have been
meticulously preserved in ceramic tile design. In both cases, the geometry mirrors crop
circle designs in either their outward appearance or in their respective construction
skeleton which, in turn, bear a familiarity to Jenny's photographic evidence.
It's no coincidence that a large percentage of crop circles can be identified with and
by ancient cultures. To this day their histories are honored through song and music, their
healing rituals performed with sound or rhythm. In Secrets of the Soil, Peter Tomkins
reveals how Hopi natives danced in a field during a severe drought, chanting specific
notes. By harvest time the only area in the vicinity to yield a harvestable crop was the
one exposed to their vibratory tones. A parallel situation exists in England, where
farmers whose fields have played host to genuine crop circles report an increase in yield
and healthier-looking, pest-resistant plants.
As Robert Lawlor once wrote in Sacred Geometry, Both our organs of perception and the
phenomenal world we perceive seem to be best understood as systems of pure pattern, or as
geometric structures of form and proportion. Therefore, when many ancient cultures chose
to examine reality through the metaphors of geometry and music they were already very
close to the position of our most contemporary science. The musical scale, constructed on
the harmonics of sacred geometry, and now found within the framework of crop circles,
represents the mathematical structure of the soul of the world because it embodies the
essence of the universe modeled on it.
Could it be, by implication, that crop circles are the universal language?
In them we see the embodiment of musical and geometrical elements as they give rise to
designs of perfect symmetry, proportion, and harmony. This may explain why people just
aren't as aroused by man-made formations regardless of how coherent they look, especially
from the air their ratios are off the mark and fail to activate a harmonic vibration
within the viewer.
The same applies to a genuine crop circle: distort or remove just one element and the
communication between viewer and design is short-circuited. It simply becomes a work of
art without meaning. But show people a mere photo of the real thing and their eyes light
up, they become emotional, lightheaded, ecstatic, benevolent, dizzy, even noxious. In
stark contrast, a hoaxed crop circle provokes apathetic, even negative reactions.
Perhaps what the viewer recognizes is a basic language common to all nature but only
retrievable by the subconscious. Our eyes may be attracted to the designs in golden wheat
but the real message is reached at a deeper level, triggered by an underlying code based
on sacred geometry the very same code upon which nature is created, and whose formulas
were zealously guarded by ancient esoterics as the knowledge of the Godly.
What we are reading in the fields of England and now throughout the world could very
well be the book of universal law.
Freddy Silva is a writer, art director, photographer, and crop circle researcher and
lecturer. He is currently looking for a publisher for his in-depth book on the phenomenon.
For more information and research on crop circles, please visit his premier web site, The
Crop Circular, at www.nh.ultranet.com/~lovely
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