Sunday, February 27, 2005

Crop circles and EM radiation

My brother just bought a new handphone yesterday. It was a Siemens M65 and it cost him $28 (2 year contract included), which I think is a very, very low price to pay for quite a good phone. Sure, it doesn't have all the bells and whistles like radio or MP3 functionality. But it has a large 65K colour screen, 5x zoom camera with video function and protection from outdoor elements, which, for $28, sounds like a steal to me.

Anyway, while handphones are good with all their functions and convenience, there's still something that bugs me -- Radiation. I've never felt at ease talking on the handphone for long periods of time without a handsfree set attached. Maybe I'm paranoid but I don't really like the idea of putting a mini-mircowave oven next to my head. But, EM radiation is unavoidable in our modern world. Its everywhere. If your handphone or radio can get a signal, then there's radiation there.

Crop circles are another mystery of the modern world that some scientists attribute to unknown EM phenomenon. Some crop circles are hoaxes by humans, but there are some where scientists cannot explain how they are formed. The crops in such circles are strangely bent 90 degrees and there is a strange EM field left within the circles that affect humans and is strong enough to damamge most electronics. But what causes these circles is still a mystery to us all and no Government seem interested to investgate (openly that is).

Recently, however, crop circles seem to be occuring more often and the patterns created seem to be getting increasingly complicated. Personally I think its due to our increasing use of EM radiation, which somehow get caught in some form of natural EM whirpool at the locations where such circles form, but that is just a theory...

The audience at the Community Center on Feb. 23 couldn't believe their eyes. Some of the images of "crop circles" and other designs shown by lecturer George Albright drew audible gasps of amazement.

The circles, which have fascinated Albright for two decades, range from simple swirled rings to elaborate mathematical patterns larger than nine football fields to faces, human and non-human. They occur all over the northern hemisphere but are most often found in fields of wheat or "rape," another name for canola, in Wiltshire County, England, during July and August.

One of the circles, actually a rectangle, which appeared in 2001 appears to be a reply to a coded message, which scientists searching for extraterrestrial life beamed into space from a large radiotelescope in 1974. Others are even stranger.

Albright, a NASA engineer who was a program manager for the Hubble Space Telescope, described how he read about the circles in a science magazine, shortly after they were first noticed in the early 1980s.

That's not when they began, however. Albright showed a slide of a 17th-century pamphlet which illustrated the circles being made by "the mowing devil of Hartfordshire," complete with horns and tail.


Click here for the full article.

1 Comments:

Blogger CS said...

Haha. Ask Cat for opinion. He shd noe of Moto is good.
If your phone cannot make it liao den faster go buy lor. Otherwise try and wait 6 more mths. Den can ask M1 for discount voucher. Haha!

1:22 PM, March 01, 2005  

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