Monday, October 5, 2015

Crop Circle Revelation: The Milk Hill Script

Crop Circle Revelation 

During the summer of 1991 interest in the crop circles in England reached a fever pitch.  Newspapers were awash with photos of new formations and articles about this strange phenomenon.  Fascinated members of the public converged on parts of Wiltshire where the circles were appearing and farmers often charged money for access to their cropfields.

Giving the subject a certain legitimacy was scientist Dr Terence Meaden, a meteorologist and author who had proposed that an elusive natural phenomenon, the Plasma Vortex, was causing these mysterious patterns in the crops.  To prove his theory he set up an observation project with a team of Japanese scientists on a hilltop between Calne and Devizes where a watch was carried out using radar and other scientific instruments.  Nevertheless the agency that caused the crop circles continued to evade detection and, despite the appearance of some circles in the fields below, nothing definite was established.

During the previous year the phenomenon had progressed from simple circles in the corn to highly elaborate shapes called pictograms which embodied both circles and rectilinear elements. Although most investigators, like me, saw clear evidence of intelligent design, Dr Meaden continued to insists that his “plasma vortex” was the answer, even suggesting that it might explode like some physical mechanism scattering cogwheels and springs, thus causing straight lines and possible key-shapes to result.  Other researchers would cautiously allow that some “unknown intelligence” was at work, but at the start of 1991 there were few who seriously believed that the crop circles were all man-made.


So for quite some time, Dr Meaden’s theory became the “official” explanation and puzzled journalists and TV interviewers would frequently turn to him when the subject was discussed.   On July 17th 1991 a vast new crop formation appeared in the fields below Barbury Castle hill-fort.  This attracted huge interest from the public and the media.  But there was no possible way that this could be explained as resulting from a plasma vortex, and, to his credit, Dr Meaden declared it must be a man-made hoax.  Even so, there were many of us who saw this new wonder as a definite part of the genuine phenomenon.  All of this was just a few weeks before Doug & Dave came out with their claim in TODAY newspaper to have made all the crop circles --a claim that was not universally accepted since there were many formations, like this one at Barbury Castle, which they could not possibly have made.   


The Milk Hill Script

In early August 1991 a strange new crop formation looking like a line of some unknown script was found in a wheat field below Milk Hill near Alton Barnes.   Croppie John Martineau, who had been out on Milk Hill in the early hours, was first to report this and described it as a “line of runes”.   Runes are the characters of certain ancient secret alphabets, consisting mainly of rectangles, with one or two sides missing and in particular orientations, with such symbols corresponding to the letters of the alphabet.  With his talk of runes, some wrongly suspected John himself of having hoaxed this formation.

Most of us were deeply puzzled by the meaning of this weird cipher.  In due course The Cerealogist , ‘The Journal for Crop Circle Studies’, under the editorship of John Michell,  offered a prize of  £100 to anyone who could come up with a convincing solution to the riddle.   Many tried but no one succeeded.   The best known attempt was: OPPONO ASTOS.  This was suggested by the late Professor Gerald Hawkins, author of the book Stonehenge Decoded.   Hawkins claimed that it meant “I oppose acts of craft and cunning” in Latin, although the accusative plural ‘astos’ is a bit dubious.   The acts of craft and cunning, he held, were crop circle hoaxes.    Other cryptographers, similarly using a straight substitution code, produced EFFETE ORDER or else ESSENE ORDER, neither of which seemed relevant.   Few people saw any merit in these solutions.

Others offered interpretations more in line with their crop circle beliefs.   American mystery-hunter the late Erik Beckjord had stamped out TALK TO US in a cornfield a few miles away two days earlier, a message presumably aimed at the aliens or whatever other intelligence lay behind the crop circles.  The Milk Hill Script he saw as a reply, though curiously he decided that the message was in Korean.   Michael Green, Chairman of CCCS, found the meaning of the crop cipher was in an Atlantean language known only to him.  He claimed that the circlemakers’ message meant  “Creator, Wise and Loving”.

The message was bounded by a small circle at each end and these were not considered part of the text. That was indeed correct.  Hawkins assumed that the character ll indicated a word break.  It did not.  For some reason he thought the message was in Latin.  No, it was in English!  More importantly, it was far from clear which way up the text was meant to be.  That would determine whether it should be read from left to right or from right to left.  In fact the text is the right way up as it is shown in the accompanying photograph, and Hawkins in producing his incorrect solution read the text from back to front.

When I was editor of The Cerealogist a year later, I renewed the challenge to translate the Milk Hill Script and also our offer of £100.   Surely someone must know what these strange runes meant?   I had assumed that by now, at any rate, the human circlemakers responsible would step forward and claim the prize.  But that was not to be.

    Barbury Castle Crop Circle, July 17th 1991  (photo by George Wingfield)

The Message Revealed

I can now reveal the true meaning of the Milk Hill Script and I still hope (if I ever get paid for this article!) to award £100 to Steve Marshall of Yatesbury, Wilts, who was the first person to inform me of it in early 2005.  He is not the circlemaker who laid down the formation and I’m still unsure whether that person --let us call him ‘A’ – was ever aware of the prize that was on offer.  I used to assume that the creators of those magnificent crop formations back in 1991, which some referred to as the legendary “A-team” without knowing their identity, were probably people who were known to the croppies at the time.  These A-team circlemakers if they existed, I reasoned, would have found it difficult to resist hanging out in their newly produced formations during the day, and mixing with croppies who came to wonder at them.   They would have become familiar faces and might even have attended crop circle conferences at that time.  But maybe I was wrong, and maybe this supposed A-team shrank from public view.

About five years ago another more recent circlemaker ‘B’ was out walking at the Cherhill monument in Wiltshire.  He overheard a man he didn’t recognize talking to some other visitors to the monument about crop circles.  He clearly displayed a degree of inside knowledge on the subject.  B waited until the others had left and then went over and talked with the man who turned out to be A.  When A realized that this was a fellow circlemaker he became rather more candid.  He told B that he and his friends had made the Barbury Castle formation in July 1991 and also that they had made the notorious Milk Hill Script.  To prove that what he was saying was true he went on to reveal the meaning of this script.   The simple message consisted of just three words run together:-

                                                  MEADENTALKSSHIT

The A-team’s little joke was to first write the lower halves of the capital letters of this message up against a tractor tramline.  This would prove indecipherable –as indeed it did—and then, when it had attracted sufficient attention, they would return by night and complete it by adding the upper halves.  Lettering of the message used by the A-team is examined in more detail in the accompanying piece which is appended below (“The Milk Hill Script Lettering”).

However the best laid plans of mice and men sometimes go awry.  The farmer was not at all pleased by the appearance of this cryptic inscription in his wheatfield or by the subsequent invasion by croppies keen to examine it believing that it might be a message from the aliens or from spiritual beings of a higher order.  He destroyed it as soon as he could by harvesting the crop in that field.  The A-team had no opportunity to return and complete their mischief.   There were only a few aerial photos taken of this half-message during its brief existence, such as the one shown here taken by Jürgen Krönig. 

Although neither the aliens, nor indeed myself, would have phrased it quite so crudely, the message does express a sentiment with which I would have concurred at the time.  Meaden had indeed talked a lot of nonsense and this certainly helped give the crop circles a false scientific legitimacy.  This is not an attempt to shift the blame for the madness which the circles provoked at the time, since many of us were utterly beguiled by them and it took several years for some researchers to come back down to earth.  In 1990 and summer 1991 this madness was at its height and there were few people prepared to even entertain the possibility that the whole phenomenon might be man-made.

Today there are still diehard croppies who will dispute what I say, but they will find it hard to reject this solution to the mysterious 1991 cipher at Milk Hill. And, if they reluctantly accept that, they should also consider whether A and his friends made the great formation at Barbury Castle two weeks earlier.  It seems most probable to me that this was indeed the case. 

George Wingfield
September 2008  

                                                                        Steve Marshall  


The Milk Hill Script Lettering

It can be seen from the photograph that the lettering used in this message is composed entirely of straight lines and that no curved or diagonal components are present.    What sort of script lettering did the authors of the message intend using?

My suggestion is that the intention was to mimic a basic type of font that is widely employed in displays using LCD or LED electronic devices, such as digital clocks or signs.   The matrix used to represent each letter might, for example, be a seven-element LED display of the following shape:-  

This consists of two squares joined together by a common side.   As an LED device, each of the seven sides of the two squares can be lit or unlit and the resulting combinations are used to represent different numeric digits or letters. When such a matrix is used to represent the digits 0–9 only, the results are unambiguous and will be familiar to most people since such numbers are commonly used in digital clocks (with the vertical elements sloped slightly to the right).

Less familiar is the use of such a matrix to represent the capital letters of the alphabet.  Clearly some letters, such as those with diagonal components, will be more poorly represented than those without.  If we equate a “lit” LED with a side being present and “unlit” with it being absent, it can be shown how characters in this format can be used as an alphanumeric font.   The LED character shown in the previous paragraph, with all sides lit or present, could be used to represent the digit 8 or the capital letter B.

Some LED displays of this variety are used to represent capital letters only.  It can be seen that the capital letters  A  B  C  D  E  F  G  are represented fairly satisfactorily in this format:     
 
And likewise, the letters  H  I  L  O  P  S  U   are:    
 
 
     One may object to the fact that D and O are represented identically and the same would be true for A and R.   For these reasons a reduced character set of less than 26 letters must be used if one is to avoid ambiguity.  Some of the capitals such as  J  K  M  N  T  Y   are not so satisfactory but are still recognizable: 
                                                       

Clearly the representation of N as two verticals is not ideal, and there are capital letters such as  O  R  Q  V  W  X  Z   which cannot be easily represented without any ambiguity and are best avoided.  Therefore one’s short message might need to be restricted, say, by using a 19-character-only alphabet which avoids these letters.

Nevertheless the letters which we have defined above are sufficient to spell out the crop message.  Using this font it appears as: 
                                     
                            

When the upper half of this lettering is removed one gets the incomplete message which is what  actually appeared in the field :-   
                                     
Apart from the fact that the small gap in the middle was closed up a bit, that is exactly what was found below Milk Hill on that day back in August 1991. 

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[This article explaining the Milk Hill Script was originally written in March 2005 and was to have been published in Fortean Times by editor Bob Rickard.  Despite Bob's assurance that it would be published soon it never appeared in that organ possibly due to the fact that he had handed over most of his editorial duties at about that time.   The article was later published in FATE Magazine.  I paid Steve Marshall the £100 prize money for this solution to the Milk Hill Script although I had long ceased to be the editor of The Cerealogist.  Mr A could have collected the prize money at any time but we have no idea whether he ever knew it was on offer.  Mr B (Matthew Williams) could equally well have collected this prize money but unlike Steve he was not the one who told me the solution.]    



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