Stantonbury Hill, Nr Marksbury, North Somerset. Reported 7th July.

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Updated Thursday 19th  July  2007

 

AERIAL SHOTS GROUND SHOTS DIAGRAMS FIELD REPORTS

Image Lucy Pringle Copyright 2007


Image Steve Alexander Copyright 2007

The short bar with circles either side is a way of signifying yin. The two longer bars with no dots represent yang. So we have one yin with two yang above. This is the trigram WIND. Wind means gentle effects, small efforts, penetrating work. Wind is akin to wood and relates to early summer, mild movement and the body part of thigh. 

One could interpret this as indicating that a gentle wind of change and purification is blowing across Mother Earth. Although gentle in appearance this wind will penetrate deeply and have profound, lasting effects. The thigh is the strongest, most weight bearing part of the body. Perhaps this is telling us something about the solidity and hidden strength of the wind.  

A Native American prophecy speaks of a purifying wind that will flatten the corn,I believe.

Michael


Image Lucy Pringle Copyright 2007


Reconstruction of the
2007 Stantonbury Hill formation

By Zef Damen




Image Paula Stone-Jarvis Copyright 2007

Previous formations in this location were:-

1999 and 2000


Follow the Countryside Code whilst visiting Crop Circles

FOR VISITING THE CROP CIRCLES.


Last Saturday (07/07/07!) my husband and I were exploring the iron age hill fort on Stantonbury Hill when we saw a crop circle below which you do not yet have on your excellent web site.  The design is a classical oriental Yin and Yang, with a complex border which may represent the I Ching symbols, but I don’t know enough about that to say for sure. 

The nearest town is Marksbury, south-west of Bath, Somerset. 

In previous years I have been in several other circles in the Bath area, and this one is very odd in that the standing crop is all leaning at an angle, as if the whole field had been pushed sideways by the circle making energy!

 
Paula Stone-Jarvis
 

Image Steve Alexander Copyright 2007



Images Janet Ossebaard Copyright 2007


Diagram Bertold Zugelder Copyright 2007


I may be way off base here but is this crop circle telling us a return of the feminine or higher frequency energies ? the clues are in the i-ching.
 
The concept of yin and yang originates in ancient Chinese philosophy and metaphysics, which describes two primal opposing but complementary forces found in all things in the universe. Yin, the darker element, is passive, dark, feminine, downward-seeking, and corresponds to the night and the moon; yang, the brighter element, is active, light, masculine, upward-seeking and corresponds to the day and the sun. 
 
I Ching - Field - K'un
Earth (Yin)
Season: (Late Summer  - early Autumn)
Field
K'un:
The womb that gives birth and nourishes
This trigram is made up of only broken lines.  It symbolises a yielding mother figure, someone receptive devoted, but in some ways dark.  This trigram is also symbolic of the power to give shape and substance to things, making thoughts and images visible.  The earth that yields the crops. 
 
 I also noticed that the i-ching lines were similar to The cross of the archangels. also known as the Golgtha cross.

RC


Diagram Tommy Borms Copyright 2007


Centre circle showing double spiral and standing tuft

Gorgeous water like lay to the
crop.... inside the yin symbol

The 'tail' of the yin symbol, narrows down to
single width of stalks. Beautiful

Click on thumbnails to enlarge

Images Debbie Marriage Copyright 2007



THE CROP CIRCLE OF STANTONBURY
HILL REPORTED 7-7-7 IS SIGNED BY ASHTAR SHERAN

 by Jean-Charles BOURQUIN


AERIAL SHOTS GROUND SHOTS DIAGRAMS FIELD REPORTS

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Mark Fussell & Stuart Dike