Crop Circles from Outer
Space?
Artist's
conception of a UFO with a crop circle. (Copyright
Lee Krystek 1996)
For over twenty years the southern English countryside
has been the site of a strange phenomenon that has baffled observers
and spawned countless news stories and not a few books. In the
middle of the night, flattened circular depressions have appeared
in fields of wheat, rye and other cereal crops. They range in
diameter from ten feet to almost a hundred feet wide and vary
from simple circles to complex spirals with rings and spurs.
All have sharply defined edges.
The most striking feature of the circles is the
frequency with which they occur. In 1990 over 700 crop-circles
appeared in Britain.
People who attempt to study these circles have
coined a name for themselves: cereologists. The word comes from
the name of the Roman goddess of vegetation, Ceres. There are
two favorite theories held by cereologists that think crop circles
are the result of some not well understood physical phenomena.
The first is that the depressions are the result of an unusual
weather effect. George Tenence Meaden, a former professor of
physics, calls this a "plasma vortex phenomenon" which he defines
as "a spinning mass of air which has accumulated a significant
fraction of electrically charged matter." According to Meaden
the effect is similar to that of ball
lightning, but larger and longer lasting.
The second theory is that somehow crop-circles
are created by UFOs. Proponents of this theory note that occasionally
crop circles seem to appear in conjunction with a UFO sighting.
Some of the early, simple crop circles certainly
do suggest fields that might have been flattened by the weight
of a grounded flying saucer. As the circles have become more
complex in shape, though, proponents of the UFO theory have
had to modify their ideas suggesting that the marks left are
due to a strange effect of the craft's drive force on the plants.
Others even argue that the shapes are messages purposefully
left by the saucer's crew.
The most likely explanation for almost all of
the crop circles is that they are hoaxes. Even the most ardent
fans of either the weather or UFO theories admit that a significant
fraction of the circles are man-made. One cereologist, a believer
in the weather theory, Jenny Randles, wrote: "I would put the
hoaxes to comprise something over 50 percent of the total."
Why don't these backers of the weather or UFO
explanations believe that all the circles are hoaxed? Most would
argue that a close examination of a circle will reveal differences
between a hoaxed circle and a "genuine" circle. There is no
clear criteria about what makes circles genuine or not, though.
In fact the BBC asked one circle "expert" to examine a formation
they had found. The expert declared it real, only to have to
reverse his judgment when the BBC film crew told him they'd
had the circle especially built for the occasion.
Some cereologists claim that the plants in hoaxed
circles have broken stems while those in real circles are bent.
It seems the bending is the result of the condition of the plant
rather than the type of force used in flattening it. During
the summer green, moist, wheat is easily bent and can only be
broken with great difficulty.
So
how do you hoax a crop circle? The tools are simple: A stake,
a chain or rope, some boards, and a few people. The stake is
pounded into the ground at the center of the soon-to-be circle
and the rope attached to it. The rope is then stretched out
and someone standing at the end marches around the stake to
make a perimeter. The boards can then be used to easily flatten
the plants within the circle. Rings can be made through the
same technique simply by leaving some sections undamaged. (Warning:
The above information is not meant to encourage anybody to trespass
or vandalize. If you want to experiment with making a circle
get the owner of the grounds permission before starting.)
Since nobody can tell the difference between a
hoaxed and "genuine" circle, is there any reason not to believe
that all of them are hoaxed? Probably not. Several factors argue
in favor of the complete hoax theory. First, there is a lack
of historical precedent for crop circles. Crop circles as they
are seen today are a recent phenomenon only twenty or thirty
years old. Secondly, the number and complexity of the circles
have grown in proportion to the media coverage of them (suggesting
that people are more apt to make circles if the circles get
in the news). Finally, there are almost no credible reports
of someone actually seeing a circle being made by either a UFO
or weather phenomena (suggesting that the hoaxers are purposefully
keeping out of sight).
Perhaps the mystery here is not what makes the
circles, but what would cause so many other-wise normal people
in southern Britain to make strange circles in the middle of
the night in a farm field?
Correction: For a while we mis-identified the
crop circle expert in the BBC incident as Colin Andrews. Our
apologies to Mr. Andrews.
Copyright Lee Krystek 1996,
2000. All rights Reserved.