Avebury Trusloe, nr Beckhampton, Wiltshire. Reported 30th June.

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Updated Friday 17th August 2018

 

AERIAL SHOTS GROUND SHOTS DIAGRAMS FIELD REPORTS

A dual design featuring a set of nested crescents neighbouring a symmetrical inverse pattern.   

Images Lucy Pringle Copyright 2018


Image Nick Nicholson Copyright 2006


Well we are up and running as of 30th June, news of a crop circle this morning got us all gathering our gear together and scurrying to the slopes of Windmill Hill near Avebury Trusloe.  We were not disappointed, the pattern on seeing the aerial view was of nested crescents very clever.  Being the first to arrive we found that locating the right tramline was a little difficult but eventually rewarding, standing alongside the pattern. It was found to be not a squashed to the ground formation, but the lay looked rather like the West Overton pattern. It certainly looks impressive from wherever it is viewed, a welcome pattern to a rather starved season so far.   NN2006

Nick Nicholson


 Reconstruction of the
2006 Avebury Trusloe formation

By Zef Damen


A Reconstruction of the 2006 Avebury Trusloe Formation

by Marc Antoine Dousset



Typical illustration of 'curved' versus 'flat' spacetime: a close match to the style of Averbury Trusloe


round


This formation illustrates the shock of impact of a comet either in water or on land. Both illustrations imply an acute angle of descent, but coming from opposite directions. This suggests comets A and B. The nested crescents represent shock waves. In the larger illustration the comet or comet fragment is located at the bottom in the middle of the depiction. On land, and to a lesser extent on the sea floor, craters resembling these illustrations would result from the impacts. 
 
Ken Heck 


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Mark Fussell & Stuart Dike