ParaNet BBS/crops: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 14:41, 14 July 2024
ParaNet BBS/crops
| File Name: | crops.txt |
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| Author: | Unknown |
| Date: | Unknown |
| Posting BBS: | Unknown |
| BBS Main Page: | ParaNet Main Page |
| Key Words: | ParaNet, UFO, Ufology |
(11369) Tue 22 Sep 92 12:14p By: Chris Rutkowski To: All Re: The End Of The Crop Circles? St: ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ @UFGATE newsin 1.27 From: rutkows@ccu.umanitoba.ca (Chris Rutkowski) Date: 20 Sep 92 19:18:27 GMT Organization: University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada Message-ID: <1992Sep20.191827.8298@ccu.umanitoba.ca> Newsgroups: sci.skeptic Well, good news! (I think :) !) In the latest issue of THE CROP Watcher, a circlezine from England, editor Paul Fuller has this to say: "Even the paranormally-inclined cerealogists have admitted that 1992 produced fakes galore, with few prepared to stick their necks out and claim that a single (NB!) British circle qualified as 'genuine'. In some ways, this restrained response could be construed as an over-reaction to last summer's hoax revelations, but in reality the awful truth has dawned on cerealogists everywhere - that most modern crop circles really are man-made hoaxes and that if there ever was a 'genuine' phenomenon in the first place it has now been utterly swamped by a smokescreen of wishful thinking and media-inspired mythology. Sad words indeed but a fact which most researchers now seem to be accepting with some reluctance." Later on, Paul notes that "leading cerealogists accept that they have lost the crop circle battle and that it is time to flee the sinking ship." A number of cerealogists are said to be emigrating to the USA! As for the remaining "meteorologically-caused" circles, Terence Meaden, that theory's main proponent has now stated that: "Anything other than a sinple circle is definitely a hoax", and he has now restricted the number of 'genuine circles' to "fewer than a dozen a year". Paul further notes: "It remains to be seen whether Meaden's meteorological theory can survive such trauma." Later in the issue, there appears a map of England, showing the locations of "Known Crop Circle (Groups of) Hoaxes". I can't reproduce it here, but to give newsgroup readers a flavour for what's on it, the editor notes that "there are so many known hoaxers that we couldn't squeeze them all in!" Good old Doug and Dave, who got all the publicity, are on there wih their small number of formations. In North America, we know that Rob Day made a few hoaxed circles in Alberta, a farmhand was caught by my colleagues and I in Manitoba, and at least one set of hoaxers admitted to some circles in the American midwest. So, we wonder, echoing Paul Fuller: Is cerealogy (or, to quote some, "crop circle mania") finally DEAD? -- Chris Rutkowski - rutkows@ccu.umanitoba.ca Royal Astronomical Society of Canada University of Manitoba - Winnipeg, Canada --- ConfMail V4.00 * Origin: Paranet(sm) - The world's leading UFO Investigative News Network @SEEN-BY 104/2 422 428 30163/100 150 @PATH: 30163/150 104/422 (1:30163/150)
