02 June 2009

Jellyfish crop circle in England


"We are looking into the meaning of it, but at present it just seems to have appeared out of nowhere."

9 comments:

  1. FWIW, the bit you quote about pi refers to a different crop circle, not the jellyfish in the photo. The paragraph immediately above your quote says:

    "Last year a crop circle described as the most complex ever to seen [sic] in Britain was discovered in a barley field in Wiltshire."

    Why all the stuff about the Wiltshire circle is in the article about the jellyfish, I don't know; maybe there just wasn't much of anything to say about the jellyfish beyond the fact that it's really big.

    --Swift Loris

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  2. Swift Loris - thank you for clarifying that. I puzzled over how one derives pi from the circels shown in the jellyfish. Post corrected.

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  3. Jellyfish? Nonsense. Can't you recognize the image of the flying spaghetti monster? This link will show you how Michelangelo portrayed her. http://foxyurl.com/4VE

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  4. Come to think of it, "It just seems to have appeared out of nowhere" is a pretty strange comment for a croppie to make, as if this were an unusual thing for a crop circle. The VAST majority of the hundreds of crop circles that are found every year just seem to have appeared "out of nowhere," typically overnight.

    Obviously the image is highly stylized, but it does seem to represent a particular kind of jellyfish, one with a sort of stalk coming down from the cap surrounded by much thinner streamers. Here are two photos from Flickr:

    http://tinyurl.com/qpo5ee
    http://tinyurl.com/olqj6c

    If you're interested in what the croppies think of this formation, check it out on the Crop Circle Connector site:

    http://tinyurl.com/m68q9d

    There are aerial shots, ground shots, diagrams, field reports, comments, and articles. A consensus seems to be forming around the idea that the jellyfish formation is warning of a solar storm that will occur on July 7, timed to a penumbral lunar eclipse.

    I'm not a croppie, but the whole collection of phenomena relating to crop circles, including the circles themselves, the croppie cult, and the cult of humans who make many (all?) of the circles, is fascinating.

    Plus which, the circles are simply beautiful, no matter how they were made.

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  5. I agree with the above; I've often said (I think on this blog) that conspiracy theory is more interesting than real life - although I'm not sure crop circles are subsumed under the category of "conspiracy" theory.

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  6. I don't think it's a jellyfish. Looks more like a timeline, story rather, of a planetary body getting closer. Planet X/Nibiru, whatever you want to call it.

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  7. Earthlings, O you fools, you always persist in seeing everything in the terms of your own tiny planet. Mind you, you have not managed yet to do more than a flea's jump off your planet's back. Which is why you would persist in reading the sign the wrong way up, and talking of fish-jellies, or some such horrible glutinous life-forms.

    We do apologise, however, and will give our younglings a severe talking to, for disobeying the instuctions not to leave graffiti, however ephemeral, on undeveloped planets.
    And definitely not such obscene filth.

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  8. What could be more clear?!I do believe that "they" live under our noses. Now they tell us where. What we know about jellyfish? Not too much. It's very unique, jellyfish doesn't have reproductive system. Who is creator of jellyfish?

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  9. Obviously a sign from our noodly master!
    http://flyingspaghettimonster.com/

    RAmen

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