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- LETTERS, Page 10Theories on Crop Rings
-
- Your description of the mysterious circles of flattened
- crops found in southern England and elsewhere (WORLD, Sept. 18)
- cites the opinion of Dr. Terence Meaden that the rings have
- nothing to do with extraterrestrial activity. As a member of a
- UFO-investigation organization, I firmly believe an outside
- intelligence not related to our planet is the sole cause of
- this phenomenon. Meaden's view that the circular depressions are
- created by atmospheric disturbances has little substance, as the
- formations are geometrically precise and the likelihood of
- random vortices creating such patterns time and time again is
- small.
-
- Richard Tarr Bristol, England
-
- There is no need to look for a "spinning ball of air" or
- extraterrestrials to explain crop rings. Any gardener will tell
- you that poor or excessive drainage of water from the soil
- surrounding plants will cause them to lie down. Ah, you say,
- why are these formations so perfectly symmetrical and geometric?
- Again the answer is simple. There are man-made structures --
- foundations or monuments -- lying just underground that block
- the growth of roots or impede drainage or prevent water's
- getting to the roots of the vegetation. The result is that these
- plants collapse and assume the shape of whatever is underground.
- Try this: put a round plate below the surface of your lawn and
- see what happens after a few days. Then you too can claim that
- a UFO has landed.
-
- Robert Grant Wealleans Encino, Calif.
-
- Similar formations were photographed more than 20 years ago
- in Australia. They were described in the late Raymond Palmer's
- U.S. Flying Saucers magazine in April 1968. Called Tully nests,
- the circular and swirled depressions (one was 30 ft. in
- diameter) appeared to have resulted from terrific rotary forces
- and were attributed to meteorological whirlwinds, small
- tornadoes or UFOs.
-
- Kenneth Lloyd Larson Los Angeles
-
- The crop rings depicted are larger than but similar to the
- fairy rings that occur on lawns in Europe and the U.S. The
- cause of fairy rings is a fungus that starts at the center and
- works outward into a beautifully precise circular ring; the
- outer edge of the grass becomes much greener, as if fairies had
- danced in a circle there. I suggest that the investigation be
- centered on the plants or soil instead of on the atmosphere or
- UFOs. I saw fairy rings some 6 ft. to 8 ft. in diameter in
- Portage County, Ohio, during the 1980s.
-
- Shirley A. Riemenschneider Rootstown, Ohio
-