Thursday, April 22, 2010

April 15 - PLANT ABNORMALITIES INDICATE PLASMA DISCHARGE IN 2009 UK CROP CIRCLES‏

Dear Friends,

A better article. Paste the link to read the article.

http://www.bltresearch.com/fieldreports/uk2009.php

Be Well.

David

PLANT ABNORMALITIES INDICATE PLASMA DISCHARGE IN 2009 UK CROP CIRCLES

by
Nancy Talbott
BLT Research Team Inc.
http://www.bltresearch.com

PART 1 | PART 2 | PART 3
- PART 1 -

"Phoenix" formation (barley), found June 12, 2009 near Yatesbury,
Wiltshire, UK. Photo: Olivier Morel.


All seed-head & node photos are the property of the BLT Research Team Inc and may be used by others with written permission from Nancy Talbott. Please contact individual photographers of various crop formations if permission is desired to use their photos.



During the 1990s multiple specific and distinctive plant abnormalities were repeatedly documented in several hundred different crop formations which had occurred in various European countries as well as in the States and Canada. Extensive laboratory examination of thousands of these crop circle plants and their controls by American biophysicist W. C. Levengood established the presence of consistent changes in the circle plants which were not present in the control plants (plants taken at varying distances outside the crop formations, but in the same fields) -- changes which control studies revealed were not caused by simple mechanical flattening of the plants (with planks, boards, cement rollers or human feet).

For detailed discussion of the plant (and subsequently soil) anomalies documented between 1990-2002, see
http://www.bltresearch.com/published.php and http://www.bltresearch.com/xrd.php.

Because some crop formations are known to be mechanically flattened by people (see a vain attempt by some M.I.T. undergraduates in Ohio, in 2002:
http://www.bltresearch.com/published/mit.php) circle enthusiasts have long desired simple indicators of the "real McCoy" -- in particular, parameters they could easily recognize while out in the fields. And while we appreciate this desire, the BLT Team's plant and soil research indicates that any reliable determination requires the documentation of multiple plant and/or soil abnormalities -- some of which documentation does require microscopic or other laboratory analysis -- to ascertain with certainty the origin of any specific event.

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