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Crop Circle Swirlies

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Uploaded by on Apr 7, 2009

A crop circle, reduced to black and white image/jpg and then spun in the software available from
halfpasthuman.com (choose swirlies) off main page. Various different speeds. Most crop circles have
these hidden images in them when run (except those made by humans with boards and string).

Category:

Science & Technology

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License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 4 dislikes

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  • Legalize for sure. Ever heard of a tripod? Or even just a stack of books?

  • Actually I think our eyes interpret continuously but our perception of fluid movement seems apparent when we see about 30-40 frames per second and upward...

    Therefore having an actual physical wheel like you gave as an example would be the best method of seeing it the least distorted by limitations imposed by saving the data stream at a limited speed to disk.

  • Without a picture of the actual crop circle, all you really have is a cool spinning thing.

  • lame

  • This is a reptilian Roerschact test .

    I kept seeing "Yosemite Sam" bronco riding on the nose of a I.C.B.M..........I'm not going crazy am I Doc?

  • it might be funny but i still want the 12m 12s back...lol

  • The message in this crop circle is "legalize it."

  • Must.... buy... kool... aid...

    What was the message in the wagon wheel's in the old Westerns?

  • So, transfer the design onto a physical wheel, spin the wheel at variable but constant speeds, do so in sunlight, and for various durations.

    If it is true our eyes tic about ten times a second, animation like that visible in this YouTube video should take place, with potential feedback-loops altering our eyes' tic-rate, in turn giving rise to altered encephalous frequencies:

  • I believe I heard Jeff Rense and Cliff High saying this design is from an actual crop-circle.

    What's newsworthy is you can spin crop-circles.

    Of course, the frame-rates of the three screens involved in viewing this particular design--that of the computer spinning the design, that of the camera filming the computer-screen, and that of your computer displaying this YouTube video--all can introduce cyclic resonance-dissonance patterns in our visual cortex, so to speak:

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