Crop-Circle Artists Becoming High Tech

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bystander
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Crop-Circle Artists Becoming High Tech

Post by bystander » Wed Aug 03, 2011 12:54 am

Crop-Circle Artists Becoming High Tech
Space.com | Wynne Parry, LiveScience | 2011 Aug 02
The artists behind increasingly elaborate crop-circle patterns are most likely skilled in math, necessary to plot epic designs, and technologically savvy enough to employ tools like microwave generators, according to a physicist.

"Today's crop-circle designs are more complex than ever, featuring up to 2,000 individual shapes arranged using intricate construction lines that are invisible to the casual observer," writes Richard Taylor, director of the Materials Science Institute at the University of Oregon, in this month's issue of Physics World. [Photos: Mysterious Crop Circles]

Traditional tools employed by these mysterious artists included "stompers," wooden planks attached to two hand-held ropes and bar stools so they could traverse crops without disturbing them. Now, crop-circle artists have access to computing power to generate fractal designs, lasers, microwaves and global positioning systems (GPS), according to Taylor.

The first crop circles appeared in English fields in the 1600s.The first scientific explanation was offered in 1686 by the British scientist Robert Plot, who discussed them in terms of airflows from the sky, Taylor writes. About three centuries later, the meteorologist and physicist Terence Meaden pointed to whirlwinds, then moved to an electro-magneto-hydrodynamic "plasma vortex" to explain increasingly elaborate patterns.

In 1991, two men in their 60s came forward and claimed responsibility for the circles, which they had created, in increasing complexity, to start a UFO hoax. (They didn't claim to have created all the crop circles around at the time, though.)

Crop circles represent the most science-oriented art movement in history: They are often built using hidden mathematical relationships, and since 1991, famous fractal designs, including the Triple Julia, have appeared regularly, according to Taylor. The three-armed Triple Julia is based on an equation formulated by the mathematician Gaston Julia in 1918.

"The increase in available computing power has also meant that iterative equations are now frequently used to generate fractal shapes such as the Triple Julia design, which reappeared in Switzerland last year," Taylor writes.

Some researchers found changes to the crops themselves that indicate they were superheated using electromagnetic radiation. They speculated that the mysterious balls of light reported over the sites or Meaden's plasma vortex may have been responsible.

These explanations are too elaborate for Taylor, who has offered another explanation for the radiation: "Might some artists therefore be supplementing physical implantation techniques with microwaves?"

Beyond artistry and conspiracy theories, circle formation techniques have serious implications, since the damaged crops are still harvested and enter our food chain, he writes.
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orin stepanek
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Re: Crop-Circle Artists Becoming High Tech

Post by orin stepanek » Wed Aug 03, 2011 7:42 pm

Yeah! Some are really high tech! :mrgreen:
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Re: Crop-Circle Artists Becoming High Tech

Post by Ann » Wed Aug 03, 2011 8:43 pm

Those crop circles are really very beautiful. And Orin, I like you crop circle-producing flying saucer, or alien balloon, or whatever it is! :D

I once visited a slightly strange and "spiritual" society, and after paying way too much to get inside in the first place, I could listen to a lecture about crop circles. I was shown an endless number of photos of truly splendid crop circles, while the lecturer droned on and on about why the circles were made either by aliens, by ancient gods or by a civilisation that lived underground in the depths of the Earth, far below the surface where the rest of us live. (Or maybe I'm mixing that up with another lecture I visited, about flying saucers... Oh, but that lecture was pretty good, actually. The lecturer was serious and willing to accept that many, if not most, sightings of UFOs can be shown to have very mundane explanations.)

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Astrobiology: The Physics of Crop Circles

Post by bystander » Sat Aug 06, 2011 6:08 pm

The Physics of Crop Circles
NASA Astrobiology Magazine | 2011 Aug 06
Image
Image Credit: IOP Institute of Physics
In this month's edition of Physics World, Richard Taylor, director of the Materials Science Institute at the University of Oregon, takes a serious, objective look at a topic that critics might claim is beyond scientific understanding – crop circles.

As the global crop-circle phenomenon grows alongside advances in science and technology, Taylor notes how physics and the arts are coming together to produce more impressive and spectacular crop-circle patterns that still manage to maintain their mystery.

Today's crop-circle designs are more complex than ever, with some featuring up to 2000 different shapes. Mathematical analysis has revealed the use of constructions lines, invisible to the eye, that are used to design the patterns, although exactly how crop circles are created remains an open question.
Image
Crop circle in Switzerland. (Credit: Wikipedia (Jabberocky))
According to Taylor, physics could potentially hold the answer, with crop-circle artists possibly using the Global Positioning System (GPS) as well as lasers and microwaves to create their patterns, dispensing with the rope, planks of wood and bar stools that have traditionally been used.

Microwaves, Taylor suggests, could be used to make crop stalks fall over and cool in a horizontal position – a technique that could explain the speed and efficiency of the artists and the incredible detail that some crop circles exhibit.

Indeed, one research team claims to be able to reproduce the intricate damage inflicted on crops using a handheld magnetron, readily available from microwave ovens, and a 12 V battery.

As Taylor writes, "Crop-circle artists are not going to give up their secrets easily. This summer, unknown artists will venture into the countryside close to your homes and carry out their craft, safe in the knowledge that they are continuing the legacy of the most science-oriented art movement in history."

Matin Durrani, Editor of Physics World, says, "It may seem odd for a physicist such as Taylor to be studying crop circles, but then he is merely trying to act like any good scientist – examining the evidence for the design and construction of crop circles without getting carried away by the side-show of UFOs, hoaxes and aliens."

Source: Institute of Physics, Physics could be behind the secrets of crop-circle artists
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
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Re: Crop-Circle Artists Becoming High Tech

Post by muneca1289 » Sun Aug 07, 2011 6:25 pm

crop circles are amazing they express another side of art. but when did they first originate?

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another side of Art

Post by neufer » Sun Aug 07, 2011 9:17 pm

muneca1289 wrote:
crop circles are amazing they express another side of art.
but when did they first originate?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mowing-Devil wrote:
<<The Mowing-Devil: or, Strange News out of Hartford-shire is the title of an English woodcut pamphlet published in 1678. The pamphlet tells of a farmer who, refusing to pay the price demanded by a labourer to mow his field, swore that he would rather that the Devil mowed it instead. According to the pamphlet, that night his field appeared to be in flame. The next morning, the field was found to be perfectly mowed - unnaturally perfect, in fact. This pamphlet, and the accompanying illustration, is often cited by crop circle reasearchers as among the first recorded cases of crop circles.>>
http://abrax7.stormloader.com/hillfig.htm
http://www.whitedragon.org.uk/articles/redhorse.htm
http://nicolacornick.co.uk/blog/2011/04/galloping-down-the-centuries/ wrote: Galloping Down the Centuries <<I am fortunate enough to live within a few miles of the Uffington White Horse, a giant hill figure carved in the chalk that has always fascinated and inspired me. It has also inspired in me an interest in where these ancient figures have come from, who carved them and what are the legends and folklore behind them. Until the White Horse was dated using new archaeological techniques in 1994, there had been many theories about its date and origins, ranging from it being a carving to celebrate King Alfred’s victory over the Vikings to it being the steed of Uther Pendragon. In fact the Uffington White Horse dates to the late Bronze Age, between 1300 and 600 BC, which in its own way is as awe-inspiring as any legend could be. Man has been preserving this hill figure for 3000 years.

The Uffington White Horse is not the only horse carved in the chalk (I was going to say by a long chalk – bad pun!) There are nine in Wiltshire alone and others elsewhere in the UK. The Westbury White Horse, unlike its cousin, is a solid horse rather than an impressionistic one. The current figure was carved in 1778 over a much earlier horse that was apparently considered too ugly because it had a sagging belly, a tail like a dolphin and a large ringed eye. No one knows the age of the original carving. Of the other white horses in Wiltshire, the horse on the hillside at Marlborough was carved in 1804 by schoolboys from Marlborough School; the one at Cherhill was created in 1780 by Dr Christopher Allsop who stood some distance away shouting instructions to his workforce through the Georgian equivalent of a megaphone! Interesting that so many of these figures date from the Georgian period. I wonder what drew the people of that period to drawing in the chalk. And why did they so often choose horses?

There is also a Red Horse – or there was. The Red Horse of Tysoe was cut into the clay of Warwickshire. It was 250 feet long and 200 feet high. Some ascribe it to the mid-fifteenth century, others to the Saxon period. In the 18th century however it was grassed over and trees grew on the spot, completely obscuring the figure.

What of the swaggering manhood of the Cerne Giant? This over-endowed figure has served as a fertility symbol for centuries. His penis was not actually originally this size – there was some over-growth in the Edwardian period (of the grass, not the giant) and enthusiastic scouring of the turf that turned his belly button into the tip of his penis!! Comparisons of diagrams from The Gentlemen’s Magazine of 1764 (yes, really!) and a sketch of 1926 show how the mistake occurred. Archaeological surveys have subsequently shown that the giant originally had a lionskin over his left arm and a severed head dangling from his hand. Nice!

My favourite hill figure, though, is the Kiwi. This was carved in 1919 by troops from the Canterbury and Otago Engineers Battalions. After the end of the First World War these troops wanted to return home to New Zealand but there were no ships to take them. Their officers decided that they should carve an enormous kiwi into the hillside both to keep them busy and stand as a tribute to their service in the war.

There are a number of other hill carvings across the UK, each with their own unique style and their own story. I’m hopeless at drawing but I am wondering if I had a workforce and a megaphone, what the iconic 21st century hill figure would look like. Would it be a glamour model or a celebrity footballer with a huge… pay packet? What would you choose?>>
Art Neuendorffer

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Re: Crop-Circle Artists Becoming High Tech

Post by eleanormars » Wed Aug 17, 2011 9:08 am

that was a very interesting read, cheers for that!
lovely images as well.

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