Crop Circles — Alien Communication / Earth Energy
Overview
Crop circles are geometric patterns created by the flattening of cereal crops such as wheat, barley, and rapeseed, typically appearing in fields overnight during the summer growing season. Since the late 1970s, these formations have been the subject of a persistent conspiracy theory claiming that they are messages from extraterrestrial intelligences, manifestations of unknown earth energies, or evidence of some other paranormal phenomenon beyond human capability. The theory gained significant traction in the 1980s, particularly in the agricultural counties of southern England, where hundreds of increasingly complex formations appeared each summer and attracted international media coverage.
The alien communication hypothesis collapsed in September 1991, when Doug Bower and Dave Chorley, two men from Southampton, England, confessed to creating the vast majority of the formations that had fueled the phenomenon. They demonstrated their methods for journalists and researchers, showing how simple tools — planks of wood, rope, and a wire-fitted baseball cap — could produce the patterns that had baffled investigators for over a decade. Their confession did not end the appearance of crop circles; instead, it gave rise to an organized subculture of human “circlemakers” who have continued producing ever more elaborate designs, alongside a diminished but persistent community of believers who maintain that some formations cannot be explained by human activity alone. The theory’s status is classified as “debunked” because every crop circle whose origin has been definitively established was made by human beings, and no credible scientific evidence supports an extraterrestrial or paranormal explanation.
Origins & History
Early Reports and the Australian Precursor
The modern crop circle phenomenon is typically traced to January 1966, when a farmer near Tully, Queensland, Australia, reported finding a circular area of flattened reeds in a swamp after allegedly witnessing a disc-shaped object rise from the lagoon. The press dubbed it a “flying saucer nest.” Investigators from the Royal Australian Air Force attributed the formation to natural causes — most likely a dust devil or waterspout — but the incident established a conceptual link between flattened vegetation patterns and unidentified flying objects that would persist for decades.
Scattered reports of circular impressions in fields existed before 1966, including accounts from southern England dating to the 1960s and 1970s. However, these early formations were simple circles, typically 20 to 40 feet in diameter, and attracted only local curiosity.
The English Phenomenon Takes Shape (1978-1989)
The crop circle phenomenon as a cultural force began in 1978, when simple circular formations started appearing with increasing regularity in the grain fields of Hampshire, Wiltshire, and surrounding counties in southern England. The circles were typically found in wheat or barley fields, with the crop flattened in a clockwise or counterclockwise spiral pattern, the stalks bent but not broken at ground level. Initially, the circles appeared singly, but by the early 1980s, they were appearing in groups — quintuplet sets (a central circle with four smaller satellite circles) and linear arrangements that suggested deliberate design.
The phenomenon attracted the attention of Pat Delgado, a retired electromechanical engineer, and Colin Andrews, an electrical engineer employed by the Test Valley Borough Council. Beginning in the early 1980s, Delgado and Andrews systematically documented and catalogued crop formations, developing what they believed was a scientific approach to an unexplained phenomenon. Their 1989 book, Circular Evidence, became a bestseller and brought crop circles to international attention. The book presented the formations as genuinely mysterious, suggested they could not have been made by human beings, and speculated about unknown natural forces or intelligent non-human agencies as their cause.
The period from 1986 to 1991 saw a dramatic escalation in both the number and complexity of formations. Simple circles gave way to elaborate pictograms, insectograms (formations resembling stylized insects), and geometric designs incorporating rings, avenues, and keys. Each summer brought formations more intricate than the last, and each new level of complexity was cited by proponents as further evidence that the circles could not be hoaxes. The reasoning was circular but persuasive to many: the formations were too large, too precise, and appeared too quickly to be the work of human beings operating at night without detection.
The Rise of Cereology
The study of crop circles became known informally as “cereology” (from Ceres, the Roman goddess of agriculture), and its practitioners as “cerealogists.” By the late 1980s, cereology had become a significant subcultural movement in Britain. Researchers established organizations, published journals, and held conferences. The Centre for Crop Circle Studies, founded in 1990, attempted to bring academic rigor to the field. Prominent figures included Andrews and Delgado, Lucy Pringle (a researcher who focused on physiological and psychological effects reported by visitors to crop formations), and Terence Meaden, a physicist and meteorologist who proposed that crop circles were created by a previously unknown atmospheric phenomenon he called a “plasma vortex” — a spinning column of ionized air.
Media coverage was extensive and largely credulous. Newspapers, television programs, and documentaries presented crop circles as one of the great unsolved mysteries of the age. The tourism industry in Wiltshire benefited substantially, with visitors from around the world traveling to view fresh formations. Farmers whose fields contained circles charged admission fees, and a cottage industry of crop circle postcards, books, and guided tours flourished.
The Bower and Chorley Confession (1991)
On September 9, 1991, the Today newspaper in London published a story that fundamentally altered the crop circle narrative. Doug Bower, a retired landscape painter, and Dave Chorley, a retired postal worker, both from Southampton, confessed to creating crop circles across southern England since 1978. The two men, who had been friends for decades, told reporters that the idea had been inspired by the 1966 Tully, Australia, “saucer nest” story, which Bower had read about while living in Australia before returning to England.
Bower and Chorley described their methods in detail. They used a four-foot plank of wood with a rope attached to each end as a “stomper board,” pressing it down onto the crop while holding the ropes as handles. They used a baseball cap fitted with a loop of wire extending from the visor as a crude sighting device to walk in straight lines toward a distant landmark. They carried a length of string to scribe circles from a central point. Working at night, typically after visiting a pub, they could create a simple circle in under an hour and more complex formations in a few hours.
To prove their claims, Bower and Chorley created a crop circle under observation, with Pat Delgado invited to inspect it before being told of its origin. Delgado initially pronounced the formation genuine, declaring it of a type that could not have been made by hoaxers. When confronted with the truth, he was visibly shaken. The demonstration dealt a severe blow to the credibility of cereology as a field.
The confession did not, however, end the debate entirely. Proponents argued that while Bower and Chorley may have been responsible for some formations, they could not account for all of them — particularly formations that appeared simultaneously in different locations or in countries outside England. Some researchers accused Bower and Chorley of being disinformation agents employed by the British government to discredit genuine phenomena. Others simply shifted their focus to formations they considered too complex to have been made by two men with planks.
Key Claims
Proponents of non-human explanations for crop circles have advanced several categories of claims over the decades:
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Extraterrestrial communication. The most prominent claim is that crop circles are messages from intelligent extraterrestrial beings, encoded in geometric and mathematical symbolism. Proponents point to formations that appear to reference mathematical constants, binary code, or astronomical configurations as evidence of deliberate communication by a non-human intelligence. The 2001 Chilbolton formation, which appeared near a radio telescope in Hampshire and resembled a response to the 1974 Arecibo message broadcast into space, is frequently cited as a key example.
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Anomalous electromagnetic effects. Researchers including Colin Andrews and Lucy Pringle have reported unusual electromagnetic readings within crop formations, including interference with electronic equipment, drained batteries, and compass anomalies. Some investigators have claimed to detect elevated radiation levels or unusual microwave signatures in freshly formed circles.
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Biological anomalies in affected plants. Proponents have claimed that plants within crop circles exhibit characteristics inconsistent with mechanical flattening. The most frequently cited claim, associated with the work of biophysicist William Levengood, is that plant stems in crop circles show “expulsion cavities” — small holes blown through the stem nodes, allegedly caused by rapid internal heating consistent with microwave radiation. Levengood also reported elongated plant nodes, altered seed germination rates, and other biological anomalies.
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Soil and mineral changes. Some researchers have reported finding unusual concentrations of iron microspheres, altered clay mineral crystallinity, or depleted nitrogen levels in soil samples taken from crop formations, suggesting that the formations were created by an energy source capable of altering soil chemistry.
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Earth energy and ley line connections. A related claim, distinct from the extraterrestrial hypothesis, holds that crop circles appear at points of concentrated “earth energy” along ley lines — hypothetical alignments of ancient sacred sites. Proponents of this view suggest that the formations are produced by natural but poorly understood telluric forces concentrated at geologically significant locations.
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Plasma vortex theory. Terence Meaden’s plasma vortex hypothesis, while not strictly a conspiracy theory, proposed that crop circles were formed by a previously unrecognized meteorological phenomenon — a spinning vortex of electrically charged air (plasma) descending from the atmosphere. This hypothesis was taken seriously by some atmospheric scientists in the late 1980s but was unable to account for the increasingly complex and asymmetric formations that appeared from 1990 onward.
Evidence and Debunking
The Human Origin of Crop Circles
The single most significant piece of evidence in the crop circle debate is the demonstrated ability of human beings to create every type of formation that has been observed. Following the Bower and Chorley confession, an international community of self-identified “circlemakers” emerged, openly documenting their techniques and producing formations of extraordinary complexity.
The most prominent group, known as the Circlemakers and led by John Lundberg, Rod Dickinson, and Wil Russell, operated primarily in southern England from the early 1990s onward. They maintained a website documenting their work and published detailed accounts of their methods. In 2002 and subsequent years, they were commissioned by organizations including National Geographic, the BBC, and various advertising firms to create crop formations under controlled and documented conditions, demonstrating that large, mathematically precise formations could be produced in a single night by small teams using basic equipment.
Modern circlemakers employ garden rollers, surveyor’s tape, laser pointers, GPS units, and detailed mathematical blueprints planned on computers. Experienced teams of five to ten people can produce formations spanning several hundred feet in diameter in four to six hours of nighttime work. The National Geographic and Discovery Channel commissions showed that even formations considered by cereologists to be among the most complex ever produced could be replicated by human teams with planning and practice.
Examination of Anomalous Claims
The electromagnetic, biological, and soil anomaly claims advanced by proponents have not withstood rigorous scrutiny:
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William Levengood’s node research. Levengood’s findings regarding expulsion cavities and elongated nodes were published in the journal Physiologia Plantarum in 1994, but subsequent analysis by other scientists revealed significant methodological problems. Kevin Knuth and other researchers found that node elongation and small perforations in plant stems are consistent with normal phototropism (the plant’s natural attempt to grow toward light after being flattened) and natural moisture-related expansion during warm weather. The presence of these features in known human-made formations undermined the claim that they were diagnostic of a non-mechanical process.
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Electromagnetic measurements. Reports of electromagnetic anomalies in crop formations have not been replicated under controlled conditions. Physicist Joe Nickell and others have noted that many of the reported effects — compass deviations, equipment malfunction, subjective physiological sensations — are consistent with observer expectation effects and have not been confirmed using calibrated instruments with proper controls.
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Soil anomalies. The iron microspheres reported in crop formation soil samples have been identified by geologists as naturally occurring particles found in agricultural soil worldwide, particularly in areas with a history of industrial activity or volcanic geology. The claimed concentrations were not found to differ statistically from control samples taken from unaffected portions of the same fields when independently tested.
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The Chilbolton “Arecibo reply.” The 2001 Chilbolton formation, while visually striking, appeared adjacent to a publicly accessible radio telescope facility and exhibited features consistent with human construction, including irregular edges and alignment errors. No credible chain of evidence connects it to an extraterrestrial source.
Surveillance and Observation Failures
Throughout the peak years of the crop circle phenomenon, multiple organized attempts were made to catch crop circles being formed, whether by human beings or by other agencies. Operation Blackbird, a major surveillance effort organized by Colin Andrews and Pat Delgado in 1990 with BBC and Japanese television participation, deployed cameras and infrared equipment around likely formation sites in Wiltshire. The operation was famously embarrassed when a formation appeared within its surveillance zone and was initially announced as a breakthrough — only for investigators to discover horoscope symbols and a board game left at the center of the formation, indicating a deliberate hoax. No surveillance operation has ever captured footage of a crop circle forming through non-human means.
The Circlemaker Subculture
The Bower and Chorley confession, rather than ending the creation of crop circles, catalyzed a creative movement. By the mid-1990s, crop circle making had become an organized activity pursued by loose networks of artists, pranksters, and land artists across England, continental Europe, and North America.
For the circlemakers themselves, the activity combined elements of performance art, mathematical puzzle-solving, physical endurance, and transgressive humor. John Lundberg, perhaps the most prominent circlemaker, has described the practice as “the landscape art that dare not speak its name,” noting the tension between the desire for artistic recognition and the legal reality that creating crop circles constitutes criminal damage to agricultural property. Most circlemakers operate anonymously and do not seek credit for specific formations, though they may document their work privately or claim it years later.
The evolution of crop circle design since the early 1990s tracks directly with the increasing sophistication of the circlemaker community. The fractal-based Julia Set formation that appeared near Stonehenge in 1996 — often cited by proponents as a formation too complex for human creation — was later attributed to a team of three circlemakers who completed it in approximately four hours under cover of darkness. The 2001 formation at Milk Hill, Wiltshire, containing 409 individual circles arranged in a spiral triskelion pattern and spanning approximately 900 feet in diameter, is generally attributed to a team operating over the course of one or two nights.
Cultural Impact
Crop Circles in Popular Culture
Crop circles became one of the defining pop-cultural motifs of the late twentieth century, ranking alongside UFO abductions and government cover-ups as instantly recognizable symbols of the paranormal. M. Night Shyamalan’s 2002 film Signs, starring Mel Gibson, depicted crop circles as navigation markers created by an alien invasion force, grossing over $400 million worldwide. The image of an aerial photograph showing geometric patterns pressed into golden grain fields became a visual shorthand for “unexplained phenomenon” in advertising, book covers, and television graphics.
Television documentaries about crop circles were a staple of 1990s programming. Series including Sightings, Unsolved Mysteries, and The X-Files featured crop circle episodes. Led Zeppelin’s 1990 box set featured a crop circle on its cover art. The formations have appeared as design elements in album artwork, fashion, and graphic design, detached from their original paranormal associations and absorbed into mainstream visual culture.
Tourism and Economic Impact
The crop circle phenomenon generated significant economic activity in Wiltshire and surrounding counties during its peak years. The village of Alton Barnes, situated in the Vale of Pewsey, became a pilgrimage site for crop circle enthusiasts after a notable formation appeared there in 1990. Farmers charged admission to visitors wishing to enter formations, and the annual crop circle season drew thousands of tourists from Japan, the United States, Germany, and elsewhere. Guided crop circle tours, aerial viewing flights, and specialized bed-and-breakfast accommodations catered to the community.
Although the tourism phenomenon has diminished from its 1990s peak, crop circles continue to appear annually in Wiltshire, and the region retains its association with the phenomenon. The Crop Circle Exhibition and Information Centre in Honeystreet, near Alton Barnes, operated for many years as a visitor center and gathering point for researchers and enthusiasts.
Impact on Paranormal Research
The crop circle episode had lasting consequences for the credibility of paranormal research more broadly. The speed with which an elaborate body of pseudo-scientific theory had been constructed around what proved to be a human-made phenomenon served as a cautionary case study in confirmation bias, wishful thinking, and the difficulty of proving a negative. Cereology’s trajectory — from confident claims of genuine mystery, through the humiliation of the Bower and Chorley confession, to the retreat into increasingly unfalsifiable claims about a subset of “genuine” formations — has been cited by skeptics and science communicators as illustrative of how paranormal beliefs sustain themselves in the face of disconfirming evidence.
The phenomenon also raised important questions about the relationship between media coverage and the proliferation of anomalous claims. The dramatic increase in crop circle complexity during the late 1980s coincided precisely with increasing media attention, suggesting a feedback loop in which circlemakers escalated their designs in response to publicity, which in turn generated further coverage and further escalation.
Timeline
- January 1966: A circular area of flattened reeds is discovered near Tully, Queensland, Australia, following a reported UFO sighting. Press coverage of the “flying saucer nest” establishes a conceptual link between flattened vegetation and extraterrestrial activity.
- 1978: Doug Bower and Dave Chorley create their first crop circles in Hampshire, England, inspired by the Tully incident. The initial formations are simple circles approximately 30 feet in diameter.
- 1978-1985: Simple circular formations appear with increasing frequency in the fields of Hampshire and Wiltshire. Local press coverage generates modest public interest.
- 1983: Pat Delgado and Colin Andrews begin systematically documenting crop formations in southern England.
- 1985-1989: Formations increase in number and complexity, progressing from single circles to quintuplet sets, ringed circles, and linear arrangements. International media coverage intensifies.
- 1989: Delgado and Andrews publish Circular Evidence, bringing crop circles to a global audience and establishing them as a major paranormal mystery.
- 1989: Terence Meaden publishes The Circles Effect and Its Mysteries, proposing the plasma vortex hypothesis.
- 1990: Operation Blackbird, a major surveillance effort to observe crop circle formation, is mounted in Wiltshire with BBC and Japanese television support. The operation captures no anomalous activity and is embarrassed by a hoaxed formation planted within its surveillance zone.
- 1990-1991: Formations reach unprecedented levels of complexity, including the Barbury Castle tetrahedron and the first pictogram-style designs.
- September 9, 1991: Doug Bower and Dave Chorley confess to the Today newspaper, demonstrating their crop circle-making techniques for journalists and researchers.
- 1991-1995: An organized circlemaker community emerges in England. Formations continue to appear annually and grow in complexity despite the confession.
- 1994: William Levengood publishes a paper in Physiologia Plantarum claiming biological anomalies in crop circle plants, providing the primary scientific citation for proponents.
- 1996: A Julia Set fractal formation appears near Stonehenge, reigniting debate about whether human teams could produce such complexity.
- 2001: The Chilbolton formation, resembling a reply to the 1974 Arecibo message, appears near a radio telescope in Hampshire. A large triskelion formation at Milk Hill, containing 409 circles, sets a record for size.
- 2002: M. Night Shyamalan’s film Signs brings crop circles to mainstream cinema audiences worldwide.
- 2002-2010: National Geographic, the BBC, and other organizations commission circlemaker teams to produce formations under documented conditions, demonstrating that all observed formation types can be replicated by humans.
- 2010s-present: Crop circles continue to appear annually in reduced numbers, primarily in Wiltshire. The circlemaker community operates internationally, and the formations are increasingly understood as a form of unauthorized land art.
Sources & Further Reading
- Delgado, Pat, and Colin Andrews. Circular Evidence: A Detailed Investigation of the Flattened Swirled Crops Phenomenon. London: Bloomsbury, 1989.
- Meaden, Terence. The Circles Effect and Its Mysteries. Bradford-on-Avon: Artetech Publishing, 1989.
- Schnabel, Jim. Round in Circles: Physicists, Poltergeists, Pranksters, and the Secret History of the Cropwatchers. London: Hamish Hamilton, 1993.
- Irving, Rob, and John Lundberg. The Field Guide: The Art, History, and Philosophy of Crop Circle Making. London: Strange Attractor Press, 2006.
- Levengood, W.C. “Anatomical Anomalies in Crop Formation Plants.” Physiologia Plantarum 92, no. 2 (1994): 356-363.
- Nickell, Joe. “Circular Reasoning: The ‘Mystery’ of Crop Circles and Their ‘Orbs’ of Light.” Skeptical Inquirer 26, no. 5 (2002).
- Taylor, Richard. “The Crop Circle Evolves.” Nature 465, no. 7299 (2010): 693.
- Pringle, Lucy. Crop Circles: The Greatest Mystery of Modern Times. London: Thorsons, 1999.
- Thomas, Andy. Vital Signs: A Complete Guide to the Crop Circle Mystery and Why It Is NOT a Hoax. Berkeley: Frog Books, 2002.
Related Theories
- Roswell Incident — The most famous alleged UFO crash, sharing thematic connections with extraterrestrial communication claims.
- Area 51 — The classified military installation frequently linked to UFO and alien technology claims.
- Crop Circle Plasma Vortex Theory — Terence Meaden’s atmospheric hypothesis for crop circle formation.
- Crop Circles Energy Node Grid — The theory connecting crop circle locations to ley lines and earth energy grids.
- Ley Lines — Ancient Global Energy Grid — The broader hypothesis of energy alignments between ancient sites, often invoked in crop circle research.
- Ancient Advanced Technology — Claims of suppressed or lost technological knowledge, sometimes linked to crop circle symbolism.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who created the crop circles in England?
Is there any scientific evidence that crop circles are made by aliens?
How are crop circles made?
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