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- The SWAMP GAS JOURNAL
-
- Volume 6, Number 1 (last issue was Volume 5, Number 3)
- January, 1992 ISSN 0707-7106
-
- The Continuing Circle Saga
-
- By now, it is likely that everyone knows about the
- Bower/Chorley hoax admission. When the story first broke, it was
- carried extensively by the media, and it seemed that cerealogy
- was doomed. TV and newspapers here in Canada boldly proclaimed
- that "all" the circles in England were explained as the work of
- BC. Suddenly, all media interest in any fortean phenomena was
- extinguished; for the most part, this condition still persists
- today.
- Of course, things are not as cut-and-dry as they might seem.
- As an objectivist, I was immediately suspicious of the BC
- claims. "Skeptics" such as CSICOP members were delighted at the
- admissions and didn't bother to consider any problems with the
- explanation. But it should have been intuitive that there was
- something wrong with the claims. A "complete" explanation is
- usually never encountered in science, and there are always
- loopholes or flaws in the design of "immutable" laws.
- The first problem with the BC story is that the two men
- could not have made all of the British circles and agriglyphs.
- In addition, there would be no way for them to have made the
- circles in other parts of the world. This problem with the claim
- is easily circumvented by noting that BC are only two of the army
- of hoaxers who might have been at work. This might also
- explain why characteristics of circles vary somewhat between
- sites.
- The next question to be addressed is whether or not BC
- really made the circles at all. This problem is not trivial, and
- it seems that it has not been fully resolved. When the media
- first covered the story, BC had been filmed before, during and
- after the creation of an agriglyph. Terence Meaden, Colin
- Andrews and Pat Delgado were each shown to make pronouncements of
- authenticity at some circle sites, though later explained that
- they had been pressured for a quick response by the media at the
- time. But nearly everyone who viewed the single agriglyph made
- by BC in front of the cameras agreed that the site was sloppy
- and "suspicious".
- Although the numbers of circles claimed made by BC started
- out at 1000 or more, the figure has been pared down to a more
- reasonable 100 or 200. Even this figure seems a bit high, but
- might be possible, if we allow BC to have a lot of energy and
- several years to work on their technique. On (the National
- Geographic's) Explorer TV show in November, other hoaxers were
- shown to take considerable planning in order to produce a complex
- in complete darkness before the cameras (not done by BC). Even
- so, they were seen by a chance witness, and when a cerealogist
- was called in for his opinion, it was dubbed a hoax without much
- delay.
- The source of the story is a bit of a problem as well. The
- tabloid which initially broke the hoax story had earlier ran
- a story that suggested ancient Sumerians were communicating with
- humans through the circles. Investigation by cerealogists
- found that the story had been generated through a "public
- relations" firm called Maiden Bridge Farm. MBF was operated by a
- husband and wife who had an unlisted telephone number (a bit odd
- for a PR firm) and which was disconnected shortly after they
- were located by the cerealogists. It seems that MBF paid some
- money to BC to come forward with their claims, contacted the
- tabloid to get a reporter's interest, then backed out of the
- picture. This immediately aroused the interest of conspiracy
- theorists, who suggested that the MoD or a subversive group had
- deliberately set cerealogists up for a fall. Although a
- plausible scenario, there is of course no hard evidence for the
- theory.
- The most frustrating thing about the whole affair is that it
- should be very easy to settle the arguments about BC's
- involvement. It would appear to be a simple task: get BC to give
- accurate descriptions of all the sites for which they were
- responsible, including dates, locations, type of crop, etc. As
- far as I have been able to determine through reading the latest
- cerealogy journals and letters from my British colleagues, this
- has not been done. The closest that has been accomplished is a
- series of verbal, heated debates between BC and agitated
- cerealogists in the media.
- However, the damage has been done. Cerealogists have been
- "burned" by some hoaxers, and the media have been warned away
- from the phenomenon. But what will the future bring?
-
- The Canadian Connection
-
- In mid-summer of 1991, Gordon Kijek and the Alberta UFO
- Study Group (AUFOSG) were prepared for an upcoming season of UFO
- investigations. Earlier in the year, Gord had asked me to assist
- in the formation of the group, and I had sent him some
- information about ufology groups and their operation. In August,
- Gord called me to tell me that a circle formation had been
- discovered near Lethbridge. He was unsure of how to investigate
- the site, but I gave a few of my ideas and wished him luck.
- Gord has seemed to be an able researcher, and I was confident
- that he would have the matter under control. Soon, he called me
- about his findings and the news that other sites had been found.
- The deluge had started.
- Less than ten sites were reported in Alberta. One was a
- remarkable agriglyph (the first of such in North America) which
- received considerable media attention. Others were single
- circles, quadruplets, and triplets. One site near Okotoks was
- judged immediately suspicious by AUFOSG because it appeared that
- the centers of the circles had been disturbed; a speculated
- method of producing fake circles involves using a stake at the
- center of an inscribed circle using a chain to mark the
- circumference.
- It is interesting to note that in 1990, there were circles
- reported throughout Western Canada, except in Alberta. But
- in 1991, the only province with circles was Alberta. None of the
- Canadian circles during the previous years had any associated
- effects, though in 1991, the Alberta circles were said to cause
- headaches, equipment malfunctions and give rise too "eerie"
- sensations and noises. These effects parallel those reported in
- England by some cerealogists, and it was curious that they
- would be found one year and not the next. More curious was the
- fact that Gord Kijek is prone to migraines, and he experienced
- no problems when inside the circles. He also called me on his
- cellular phone from inside a circle, with no malfunctioning!
- Do such effects really occur? Michael Strainic, reporting
- on the investigations of Chad Deetken on his trip to Alberta,
- wrote an excellent article for the MUFON Journal which detailed
- Deetken's findings. Deetken has a different research
- perspective than that of AUFOSG, including his investigation
- style. For example, in 1990, Deetken visited some circle sites
- in Saskatchewan; during his time there, he decided to camp
- overnight in a circle. In the middle of the night, Deetken
- reported a "feeling of terror" which overcame him, and he bolted
- from the site. He had earlier documented how the area was
- permeated with some sort of "energy". Not surprisingly, when he
- decided to sleep overnight in one of the 1991 Alberta circles, he
- experienced "tension" and "dizziness" during the night, as did
- his companions.
- Although suggesting that "paranormal effects" were
- associated with the Alberta circles, Strainic also noted that
- such effects were not often found. Indeed, compass needles were
- said to operate normally, as did recording equipment and cameras
- taken to sites. Strainic noted that anecdotal reports of animal
- effects at circles were common, according to Deetken. But this
- was not the case in Manitoba, and such reports were not made to
- AUFOSG in the Alberta cases.
- One interesting series of effects involved microwave ovens
- which were said to have malfunctioned, including one which
- was said to have turned itself on. AUFOSG members as well as
- Deetken all checked into these reports, though there was
- admittedly no confirming evidence of these events.
- So, what happened in Alberta? There exist two disparate
- investigation records of the circle sites. AUFOSG found
- virtually no evidence of "paranormal effects", physiological
- effects or equipment malfunctions at sites, but Deetken did. It
- is likely that each investigator's inherent biases played
- significant roles in the interpretation of data. Michael
- Strainic's fascinating report is of great use to other
- researchers in the analyses of crop circle data, because it
- parallels the British experience. In this way, we can better
- understand the British situation, and how cerealogy may be
- operating in that country.
-
- Radioactivity?
-
- Recently, it has been claimed that several crop circles are
- radioactive. Specifically, it has been reported that soil
- samples taken from two British circles and some from recent
- American sites have significantly-higher levels of radioactivity
- than control samples from the same areas. Further, this
- radioactivity has been traced to higher-than-normal levels of
- activity caused by certain rare, radioactive elements such as
- Europium, Ytterbium and Rhodium. If true, than this certainly
- speaks for the creation of crop circles by aliens and utterly
- invalidates any other theory, including hoaxing.
- The claims are made by Michael Chorost and Marshall Dudley
- in a MUFON paper. Advance notice of their claims is already
- in circulation, and many people are very excited about their
- findings. Mike sent me a copy of a draft and called me to
- discuss the writeup, in case I had some comments. As I read the
- paper, I had some of my own reservations, but I decided to take
- the paper to show two friends who are physicists at the
- University of Manitoba. They were less than impressed, to say
- the least. However, I persisted (read: I annoyed them) until they
- described exactly what they were doubtful about.
- My own reservations concerned the sampling techniques and
- the small amount of data upon which to base a claim. Also, I
- was worried that there had not been any testable theory posed in
- advance of finding the data. The Manitoba physicists found
- more problems in the physical attributes. Very rare radioactive
- elements had been discovered through a comparison of peaks on a
- readout of an energy spectrum produced by an analysis of the soil
- samples. Such peaks were not present in the control sample
- readouts. Because of the difficulty in producing these
- artificial elements, Chorost and Dudley devote much of their
- paper to ways in which deuteron (an energetic particle)
- bombardment of the soil could create the rare elements. In the
- end, they concluded that this deuteron bombardment was
- responsible for the presence of the radioactivity, and that such
- a beam may have also have been related to the formation of the
- circles themselves, though how and why is unknown. They actually
- don't say that a UFO was responsible, although this could be read
- into their report.
- However, the finding of these elements is not only strange,
- it is downright impossible (uh-oh, I'm sounding like Donald
- Menzel). The reason is that if a deuteron bombardment did occur,
- then many other elements would have been found as well. For
- example, even weak activation of soil by deuterons (or protons,
- for that matter) will create Cobalt-56 out of Iron-56. Since
- there is a lot more Iron in soil than Ytterbium, the radioactive
- Cobalt would be definitely found. Since it wasn't, deuteron
- bombardment probably did not occur. An analogy is this: suppose
- you went into a someone's room and found a few gold-coloured
- coins on the floor. You could see them as evidence that the
- room's occupant was a bank robber, because of the "loot"
- scattered about. But if this were true, where would all the
- other types of money be, like dollar bills and bonds? And what
- if the coins turned out to be wrapped chocolate?
- Dudley and Chorost do caution that more intensive research
- and more thorough surveys of fields are required for
- comparative data. It may be that the distribution of elements in
- the soil just happens to be high in that particular area.
- Another source of possible error is in the interpretation of the
- energy peaks and the checking of an energy table. In fact,
- using the standard energy table, we found several other elements
- that should have been created in the deuteron bombardment, but
- were not mentioned.
- Greg Kennedy, a circle researcher from Quebec, found the
- claims of radionuclides in crop circle samples to be
- unsupported by the data. If radiation was found, he noted, it
- certainly did not come from the "deuteron beam" suggested by the
- American cerealogists. It's possible that some sort of exotic
- combination of elements were somehow in the soil samples, but it
- was just as possible that the samples were contaminated in some
- way. Greg tested samples of the Alberta circles given to him by
- Mike Strainic from Chad Deetken. No anomalies were found. He
- also has been looking at samples from other Alberta circles which
- originated from Gord Kijek. Now, if there are no radionuclides
- in the Alberta samples, it does not necessarily negate the
- American results (of the British cases). It could mean: a) the
- Alberta circles are fakes; b) the British circles were hoaxes;
- c) a different "beam" created the Alberta circles; d) the testing
- was inconsistent; or e) somebody screwed up. But who? I
- think the only way to resolve this is to get several independent
- labs (and I wouldn't hesitate to get Phil Klass involved here)
- to test the same samples for comparative analyses. Along with
- this would be a standardization of experimental cerealogy. And
- there are a number of procedures that would probably satisfy most
- skeptics.
- What I suggested to Mike was the following experiment.
- First, postulate that a deuteron (or proton) bombardment will
- cause some observed effects. Take samples from inside and
- outside a circle site. Test them on the same instrument. Record
- your results. Next, send the same samples to a different lab
- without passing on your data or findings. While the second lab
- is analyzing the samples, recalibrate your instrument. Obtain a
- new set of samples, with a different control sample, and analyze
- this new set using the same procedure. Have the other lab repeat
- its steps and test the new set of samples. Then, you'll have
- four sets of data for comparison. Look specifically for certain
- elements. Cobalt-56 is a standard test element. Check for
- Iron, Magnesium, Sodium, then Lead, Strontium, etc. If there are
- significant differences found (and I would use an alpha of
- about 0.05), then you have something that you can point to and
- say: "This needs further examination!"
- Sure, it's a long procedure, but remember, what you're
- trying to do is prove an external mechanism for the creation of
- crop circles, which are already widely assumed to be caused by
- hoaxers. The skeptics have already launched their arguments
- against the reality of the crop circle phenomenon; Dennis Stacy
- sent me a preprint of an article in the Skeptical Inquirer on
- this topic.
- Another reason why so much care needs to be taken is that in
- all the history of UGMs (unidentified ground markings),
- "saucer nests" and "UFO landing sites", a very, very small number
- had any associated radioactivity. Cerealogists often argue
- that crop circles are different from other UGMs, but it should be
- obvious that they are really quite similar. Crop circles are
- kinds of UGMs, and the link with UFOs definitely exists. Bower
- and Chorley claim they even got the idea for their artistic
- endeavours from the Tully "saucer nests" of the 1960's. It would
- be rather odd for UGMs to suddenly be laced with
- radioactivity; it is more likely that cerealogists are
- frenetically searching for evidence to show that crop circles are
- unlike other UGMs, and believe that they have found the radiation
- as their proof.
- Now, much to my wife's consternation, I do have some
- radioactive soil safely stored in a cement container in my house.
- It came from the Michalak site, from the "saucer nest" found near
- Falcon Lake in 1967. The area was so radioactive that the
- Government closed the area for health concerns at the time.
- Nuclear waste dumps were checked, and Michalak went to a nuclear
- research establishment for testing. For many years, it was
- widely assumed that the radiation was either due to a clever
- "seeding" of the area with radium particles by a hoaxer, or was
- actually caused by a spacecraft with a leaky reactor. However,
- recent tests sponsored by UFOROM gave another interpretation:
- that the radiation came from natural uranium ore, and the odd
- peaks found in the energy spectrum came from byproducts of radon,
- a gas.
- But, of course, things are not quite that simple. This
- latest interpretation requires that researchers at a major
- government nuclear research establishment failed to recognise the
- peaks as being due to natural uranium and radon. While this
- is possible, one can wonder what other mistakes might have
- occurred, and what were their consequences?
-
- Circle Roundup: After Granum, Alberta, near the beginning of
- September, there were no more Canadian UGMs reported. In the
- United States, there were cases reported in North Dakota, New
- York, Kansas, and the noted case near Argonne. However,
- summertime down under has produced a new crop of circles and UFO
- reports in Australia. Reports of "over 100" circles on the
- island continent are making headlines as I write these notes.
- Here in North America, we wait for springtime to see what might
- occur.
-
- >From the Mailbag: Laurence Sokoloff, whom some have likened to
- an alien, sends me obscure articles he comes across during his
- literary endeavours. His latest came from Paris Match for 12
- Decembre 1991, with the accompanying note: "Chris - This article
- is about French scientist Jean-Pierre Petit, who maintains that
- startling scientific discoveries have been revealed to him by
- aliens from the planet UMMO, located about 15 light-years from
- Earth. His book on the subject, Inquiry into the Aliens Who Are
- Already Among Us, has become a best-seller in France. Of course,
- these are people who like Jerry Lewis." Thanks for the
- article, Larry!
-
- Snailmail et al
-
- It would be difficult to list every missive I have received
- over the past 6 months, and downright dangerous. More than
- a few people have pored through previous LoCs and WAHFs in
- previous issues and complained that I missed their names. If it
- happens, it's an accident, really! However, let me throw caution
- to the wind and comment on a few letters.
- Len Stringfield sent me his latest Status Report VI (thanx,
- Len!); it is a very readable survey of current crash-
- retrieval stories, ranging from Roswell to Carp to Christian
- Page's "alien" photo from Montreal. Christian, by the way, is
- rapidly emerging as one on Canada's finest ufologists, with the
- added dimension of contributing UFO info from French Canada
- which was generally inaccessible until recently. Mike Strainic
- and Lorne Goldfader in BC have been contributing cases and other
- info to my Canadian UFO Survey. Mike's article in MUFON about
- Chad Deetken's circle expeditions has already been commented
- upon. John Schuessler has sent me his UFO Potpourri; Bonnie
- Wheeler sent along her Cambridge UFO Research Group Newsletter
- (honestly, Bonnie, what is your xerox bill?); Bob Girard's
- Arcturus Book Service Catalog is worth reading just for his
- annotations!
- A special thanks goes out to John Salter, who continues to
- document his fascinating experiences and keep his close
- friends abreast of the latest (TV makes you look thinner, John!).
- MUFON rep Eric Aggen publishes UFO Paradox occasionally, and
- it is usually chock full of interesting Lazar or alien tech
- stories. I am proud to say that I am among the non-subscribers
- to Saucer Smear, published by James Moseley. Where else can you
- read a running tirade between believers and skeptics, with barely
- a hint of sarcasm? Jim is definitely worthy of his title,
- Supreme Commander! Smear is absolutely essential to any
- fortean's reading.
- As for cerealogy, Paul Fuller's Crop Watcher and Pat
- Delgado's CPR Newsletter are the two circlezines I receive most
- regularly. Coming from two different "camps", they provide
- complementary (and often discordant) views on the British circle
- scene. I would like to note that Jenny Randles has resumed her
- exchange of Northern UFO News with SGJ, which was interrupted by
- a span of 10 years. Ah, but that was back in the days of UFOSIS
- ...
- As I am not a paying member of MUFON, I only get its Journal
- intermittently. However, Walt Andrus and Dennis Stacy have
- both been corresponding with me and we have been sending things
- back and forth throughout the year. Dennis sent me a draft of
- an anti-cerealogy article from an upcoming Skeptical Inquirer,
- and asked me for a few comments and ammunition for his response
- to CSICOP. Oddly, my package to him was returned unopened. MIB?
- CIA? M-O-U-S-E ...
- Eric Herr in San Diego is compiling a list of physical trace
- cases that support his magnetic propulsion system theory.
- John Musgrave has moved to BC, and has been somewhat quiet of
- late. (How's trix, John?) What can I say about Paul Cuttle, the
- intrepid fortean who keeps Canada Post in business? I wish I had
- the time to track down all the material you find, Paul!
- As an experiment, I have been encouraged to offer the SGJ as
- a textfile in the UFO International echo, available on
- computer BBs's. If it doesn't work, I would like to thank the
- people who post me or netmail me with info. Linda Bird in
- Arizona has been very helpful in providing info on UGMs down her
- way. And her pix of the "Starthenon" are out of this world!
- Dark skies, Linda! Sheldon Wernikoff, a BBS regular, has
- thankfully snailmailed me some stuff to save a lot of typing.
- His access and interest in circles is a significant contribution
- to the field. I must thank Harsha Godaveri who got me onto the
- BBs's in the first place, and who uploaded my disks until my
- feeble system was up and running. The bad news is, Harsha, I've
- contracted three different viruses since being on the BBS's, and
- I'm going to give up until it gets a bit safer. I don't want
- to lose another hard drive!
- Michael Chorost has been keeping me abreast of his detailed
- work on circles, including his catalogues of cases and his
- articles in various journals. Similarly, another MUFON
- contributor, Vince Migliore of California, has sent along his
- comments about the circle scene. I have had many letters from
- people along the lines of: "please send me everything you have
- about crop circles and/or UFOs". Sorry, but I don't send more
- than three filing cabinets at a time through the mail.
- It is fascinating to receive information from researchers
- with differing viewpoints; the "alien technologists", the
- "Lear/Cooper" camp, the "nuts-and-bolts" theorists, the "plasma
- vortex" theorists, the mystics, the contactees, the debunkers,
- etc. It has always been my philosophy and approach to the field
- that the only way to get an adequate understanding of the
- phenomena is to examine all (both) sides of the arguments, no
- matter how esoteric or stoic. A pet peeve of mine is the
- preponderance of new "experts" who lack any kind of background in
- the genre. Circle researchers who have never studied other
- kinds of trace cases are one kind of irritant, as are ufologists
- who haven't done their homework and haven't bothered reading
- any of the historical literature that would shed light on their
- "new" cases. Until Bower and Chorley mentioned the Tully saucer
- nests, many cerealogists had never heard of the case. Similarly,
- "plasma vortex experts" sometimes scratch their heads when
- told of Phil Klass' articles in AW&ST, or of Persinger's TST.
- Actually, I think one problem is the overwhelming amount of
- information that has been published on the subject during the
- last forty or fifty years. Chester Cuthbert, the Canadian expert
- on the paranormal, also has one of the largest collections of
- science fiction literature. He told me that when he began
- collecting SF, it was possible to get everything published during
- the course of a year. Then, when SF actually became popular
- and it went commercial, he couldn't keep up, so he had to
- specialize. One of his "specializations" back then was flying
- saucer literature, which sprang out of SF literature. But by the
- late 1950's, saucer literature was blossoming and it started to
- become difficult to collect even this small field. The situation
- has progressed to the point where UFOlit is nearly impossible
- to collect in its entirety. A single one of Bob Girard's
- catalogs now contains more titles than were ever published a mere
- 20 years ago! (In the Seventies!) Even with the help of
- compilers like George Eberhart, getting a complete overview of
- the UFO or circle field is not easy, and it's not getting any
- better. Vanity presses continue to churn out accounts of contact
- with the space brothers; collecting only Billy Meier material
- could send you into the poorhouse in a year!
-
- Miscellanea
-
- A number of interesting books of note have been added to the
- UFOROM library, among them: Angels and Aliens by Keith Thompson
- (1991); UFOs Over Canada by John Robert Colombo (1991); The
- Algonquin Experiments by James Penman Rae (1978); UFO Report 1992
- edited by Timothy Good (1991); and Things That Go Bump in the
- Night by Emily Peach (1991).
- Colombo's latest tome is a collection of anecdotal accounts,
- all in the first person, of UFO sightings in Canada over two
- centuries. The lack of the investigation reports of the cases
- gives it more of a folkloric approach to the subject rather than
- an overview such as the earlier UFO Sightings, Landings,
- Abductions by Yurko Bondarchuk. Nevertheless, it
- provides a refreshing viewpoint of the witnesses' own
- interpretations of their experiences, and is a worthwhile read.
- On a different topic, it looks like the infamous Carp UFO
- crash/retrieval is not quite dead. Len Stringfield included
- comments about the matter by Clive Nadin, Christian Page and
- myself in his latest Status Report. I continue to get the latest
- ravings from its originator(s), including ramblings about Red
- China taking over the world and how the Brotherhood will protect
- the Holy Grail and save us from the aliens. Theaccompanying
- photos are mostly blurry, though one shows a guy in a bad
- alien mask. Sad, sad. We have been able to show that the
- packages are mailed from Ottawa/Hull, so the suspicion falls on
- UFO buffs in that area.
- =================================================================
- A special note to Canadian readers: it's time once again for
- the annual Canadian UFO Survey! Send just your report data to
- the address below for inclusion in the yearly case roundup. And
- while you're at it, some of you (Americans included here!) have
- not provided details of UGMs and crop circles for the annual
- NAICCR report. Tsk. They're waiting for you!
- Thanks to all who provide data or otherwise contribute to
- the information exchange in ufology, cerealogy or forteana. You
- are the reason progress continues to be made in these fields!
- =================================================================
- The SWAMP GAS JOURNAL is an irregular ufozine published by:
-
- Ufology Research of Manitoba
- P.O. Box 1918
- Winnipeg, Manitoba
- Canada R3C 3R2
-
- Copyright 1991 by Chris A. Rutkowski
- ================================================================
-
-