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September 10, 2001: Crop Circles - Richard C. Hoagland, Colin Andrews, & Andrew Yoder
Published 1 year, 3 months ago
Description
Art Bell brings together Richard C. Hoagland and crop circle researcher Colin Andrews to present breaking findings from the Chilbolton formations. Andrews, freshly returned from five days of fieldwork in the English wheat fields, reports that he found no stake holes, no stomper board marks, and no compression evidence typically left by human circle-makers. He confirms his view that whatever created these glyphs represents a departure from anything seen in two decades of research.
Andrews reveals a startling discovery: electrostatic readings of 80 volts measured along grid lines within the formations, pulsing repeatedly two weeks after their creation in the damp English climate. He explains that the readings correspond precisely to energy patterns that dowsers have reported for years, providing the first instrumental confirmation of those claims. Hoagland argues the sustained electrostatic signature points to a replenishing energy source and technology beyond conventional physics.
The program shifts to author Andrew Yoder, who discusses the world of unlicensed shortwave pirate radio. Yoder explains that pirate broadcasters range from creative professionals seeking an unregulated outlet to political dissidents and hobbyists. He notes that a Belgian station was audible in the United States at just 30 milliwatts of power, and that no FCC enforcement actions against pirates had occurred since 1998.
Andrews reveals a startling discovery: electrostatic readings of 80 volts measured along grid lines within the formations, pulsing repeatedly two weeks after their creation in the damp English climate. He explains that the readings correspond precisely to energy patterns that dowsers have reported for years, providing the first instrumental confirmation of those claims. Hoagland argues the sustained electrostatic signature points to a replenishing energy source and technology beyond conventional physics.
The program shifts to author Andrew Yoder, who discusses the world of unlicensed shortwave pirate radio. Yoder explains that pirate broadcasters range from creative professionals seeking an unregulated outlet to political dissidents and hobbyists. He notes that a Belgian station was audible in the United States at just 30 milliwatts of power, and that no FCC enforcement actions against pirates had occurred since 1998.