Ramblings of a Wandering Mind 4.03
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_theory
First let me state, I am no expert on string theory. I have read a few items but as for the technical details of it is all theory, so far. There should be others that know more here, I am child in my understanding of it. But to answer your question, what makes them vibrate? I do not, with any certainty, know what makes them vibrate. But if you ask me it is thought. Thought of something, that would apply and change the primary elements basic function through rearranging the vibrations. It would be like changing air to a solid just by knowing how to rearrange these vibrations of the elements that you are working width, with thought alone. Possibly just how the crystal castle was created, except that it was using coral as the medium. Just one possible theory.
And MusicMan it does not matter if I know it or not, it is that you shared it, there will be others who need this information, if not me. It is good to be reminded anyway. Everyone has their independent point of view that is different than anyone else’s and it just may help in the deciphering of these glyph’s, even if is repeating information.
Thank you all for your line information, it is good to see others thinking along the same line. (pun intended)
我工作在两个不同的麦田怪圈。它是the Avebury crop circle and the West Stowell crop circle from July 4, 1994. I am looking for any kind of correlation because they are very similar in concept. There are questions abound in doing this. I am starting with a spiral drawn over the image, which I have stretched to make the main center of the crop circle round. With the spiral starting at the end of the edge of the arms, I traversed thru all quantity of loops in the spiral from one to fifteen in .25° increments and I saved images of them for every whole number degree. I did this on the West Stowell circle first. After review of the 15 images that I just created I see that the one with seven loops in the spiral lined up best with the centers in this image toward the center of the image. I am in decision on whether this is also applicable to the outer centers outside of the main image. They might be on a different spiral, I am not too sure just yet. One thing that I noticed is that the start point on the spiral can critically affect whether the grooves align with the image and there has to be a starting point in the image to show me where to start this spiral. Right now I have been using a placement at 315° in my CAD layout. So I am coming back to my starting point that I started this all on. There is a small center in the Avebury that made me start this whole thought. It was odd being so small that it kind of drew my attention to it. I named it the starting point in more in of a rhetorical sense. And that drew me into the Center name. so I am looking at using this as a starting point in my spiral placement. But what about West Stowell? Did it have one of these smaller centers in it anywhere. So after close examination of the West Stowell crop circle I saw no independently small sized center like in Avebury. After close examination of all images available to West Stowell I thought I could see inside a halo the object that I was looking for. And it looks to me like it is at the center of a halo object in the circle that is different than the other two halo’s in this circle. Makes it kind of stand out in the crop circle, an increased expressive and informative purpose in the crop circle. The small center in this circle is where I will start the spiral. The direction of the spiral is also being determined by the arms rotation direction, I will just extend in the same direction, counterclockwise. Now I did worry about if the image if it was mirrored but the end result would be the same I would just reverse the direction of the spiral on the mirrored image, no difference. So I have direction and starting point of the spiral. And hopefully the same 7 spirals still work on the image, we shall see. Now run the same also on the Avebury circle. First this interesting item on the West Stowell circle. The spiral arc crosses the starting point, the center of concern, when it starts at the same point on the outside circle. On the Avebury circle it does not when using the same parameters. Avebury does work better with seven revolutions of the spiral if it goes in reverse but still no cross over of the little center. In fact it was closer to centered between coils of the spiral. What is the difference between these small centers? One is stand alone and the other is centered in a halo. No real consistency other than a correlation of 7 coils of the spiral although one is better in reverse direction. I need to verify that statement. No it is wrong, there is 2 centers on the coil of the spiral in both circumstances. And the curved line is different in both instances in placement and size, but both are curved in a similar manor, as if to perform a purpose rather than lane changer. If this is a coiled message then maybe this will help in their deciphering. I personally do not see enough in them to state consistency, yet.
I found crop circles in photographic images starting at 1989. This first one is a stand-alone center, well that is what I thought at first. In a closer look it had crop texturing that will make it interesting to model. It is roughly a forty-foot circle with an inner pattern that is about 10-12 feet in diameter. There is a distinct outward pattern in the crop texturing, done on 4 quadrants of the center. It was located near Stonehenge, about 1-2 miles west-southwest of the structure. The next image found was in 1991 and was more complex and more artistic in value. It more resembles a large heart shaped center and several centers located around the object. It was located south of Cambridge. There were two in 1993. One located near Catworth that resembled a large center with a sun inside of it and a star inside of the sun. This will be very difficult to model in 3D, I can see many angles to align to make this one look good. The other was near Cherhill. I see centers, halos, interconnecting lines and possible a split halo or some kind of arc formation, all lined up in a row, 100’s of feet long.
That brings us to 1994. This was a time when crop circles really got documented, and mostly by Steve Alexander. I have to commend him on his endeavor. The two circles that I have been talking about earlier are from this same year. There was over 20 documented crop circles in this year and I would state that some of the first crop circle forgeries, crooked and quickly placed circles, are there also.
I am really looking for consistency because I expect that the messages to evolve as it progresses. So I am scanning and looking for this consistency in the crop circles and especially ones in this year.
现在回到这些麦田圈。还有第三个circle that may be the next translation of the message. It is the Froxfield crop circle from August 1, 1994. It is kind of similar except it is all halo’s in a greater halo. One thing, I am having difficulty seeing it in the image but there may be a minor center at the center of one of the halo’s. This is a big hope. It also looks similar in that the halo’s placement resembles a radial pattern that we see in the other two. Also there are centers located outside the greater halo, I see this in the other. Kind of like they are looking in, watching from outside. Ever have an ant farm, they are most interesting, a whole bio-system under your watch. It is interesting that all of these had satellite centers.
The Avebury circle was a turbulent image. That evolved into West Stowell where controls were put in place by added more halo objects. You can see the turbulence is less in this crop circle, but it still had the curved line and it also looked locked in place by the crop texturing. Now you get to the Froxfield crop circle and it is rather calm in turbulence all thru the object. But having a greater halo may also help this, but it also locks everything in side of itself. In a nice perfect environment.
I would have to say the Avebury crop circle is presenting itself to be very STS in origin or at least in presentation. The West Stowell is what I would say a more balanced situation with some level of STS and STO near balance in presentation, at least less STS then Avebury. The Froxfield crop circle is almost perfectly STO in presentation.
This is most interesting as the first crop circle at Stonehenge in 1989 is another example of order. It has orderly crop laydown. Not only orderly it is quad-directional. This is important. Four equal areas with defined crop laydowns with a center in the center that looks spherical to me. This looks like some kind of equilateral segregated order with a center that interfaces all. Well that is what I see here.
Back to the Froxfield crop circle. Is it aligned by the seven coil spiral as the other circles? No I am not getting any consistency in the seven coil spiral. It does seem that these halo’s, and the centers in the other crop circles, are in some sort of spiraling pattern, I am just not finding it. An item that I am failing at is seeing the small center in this circle. I think I can see it in a halo, but I am not 100% certain. It is not anywhere else in the greater halo that I can see. So I have a dilemma. What I did was rotated the start point of the spiral around the outer circle to align to all objects in this circle. The radial lines around the circle are placed every 10°, gives me a point of reference. First I noted that when I aligned the spiral start before on the West Stowell circle the alignment and the coil of the spiral went across the center of the halo. I looked for this as I spun the start of the coil around the perimeter. I did find one halo that aligned this way, it was smaller one at 1:30 position. The other alignments were terrible with it in this position. The alignment that looked best is with the beginning of the spiral aligned with the halo at 9:00 position.
I am attaching my best results from all three crop circles in the seven spiral analysis. Haiku …