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Skywizard
22nd May 2014, 02:11
http://i.livescience.com/images/i/000/038/397/i02/fairy-circles-2.jpg?1364489695
A shot out of the open door of a plane showing fully developed "adult" fairy circles, with
a few newly established "babies" developing in the interspace between the old ones
(Aerial view of Namibrand, Namibia.)


"Fairy circles" that form in the arid grasslands of Namibia have baffled scientists for decades. In the latest attempt to explain the cause of these mysterious circular patches, a group of researchers turned to aerial images.

From the aerial images, the scientists discovered that fairy circles are distributed in surprisingly regular patterns, which might rule out the popular theory that termites are the creators.

"The occurrence of such patterning in nature is rather unusual," study researcher Stephan Getzin, of the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) in Leipzig, Germany, said in a statement. "There must be particularly strong regulating forces at work."

Fairy circles are barren patches, typically surrounded by a ring of thriving vegetation. They can grow to be 65 feet (20 meters) in diameter and can linger for as long as 75 years.

For the past several years, scientists have offered up a variety of hypotheses for why these rings form in the arid grasslands transitioning into the Namib Desert. Their explanations have ranged from grass-killing seeps of hydrocarbons to carnivorous ants to termite feeding patterns.

One biologist recently conducted a census of organisms at fairy circles. His results, detailed in the journal Science last year, revealed a species of sand termite, Psammotermes allocerus, lived at the majority of patches. He concluded that the insects seemed to be feeding on the grass roots, creating the characteristic rings.

Getzin and his colleagues, however, say termites are typically distributed in irregular clusters in the wild; they argue that the insects couldn't create patterns as consistent as the ones they observed in their aerial photos.

"There is, up to now, not one single piece of evidence demonstrating that social insects are capable of creating homogenously distributed structures on such a large scale," Getzin said in a statement.

Getzin and colleagues think the most convincing explanation for fairy rings is that the grass grows in self-regulating patterns to deal with competition for water.

The researchers compared the situation to growth trends in forests. In a young forest, plants tend to grow at a relatively close range to one another. But over the years, vegetation thins in a self-regulating process so that mature trees have enough space and resources, the researchers said. Resource competition may similarly drive a self-organized formation of fairy circles.

The findings were detailed in the journal Ecography.



Source: http://news.discovery.com/earth/plants/mysterious-fairy-circles-not-caused-by-termites-140521.htm



peace...

Ahnung-quay
22nd May 2014, 02:29
Or, it could just be due to fairies.

Tesla_WTC_Solution
22nd May 2014, 07:54
Sandworms of Dune? lol!

p.s. SPICE BLOWWWWW :pound:

Sunny-side-up
22nd May 2014, 08:52
First impression as I looked at that photo was:
Michael Tellinger, Ancient Technology, South African Stone Circles, Power Rings!

All over South Africa there are thousands of rings "Man Made?" that have and or produce energy fields!
Is this the same energy from within the Earth producing rings in it's natural state.
In the ancient past natives would have added stones to the rings, maybe?

Any energy with these rings? We need Michael's view and or investigation on this subject ha !

Very interesting post ;)

william r sanford72
22nd May 2014, 15:43
impression is of a unkown or not fully understood insect..life cycles..etc..mother earth loves patterns.take a honeybee hive..for example.the shape that the hive takes on.and the chambers built to hold brood and food are always made this way.for 1 cause that specific shape seems to bee strongest....and able to hold as much honey..pollen..brood as poss in a given amount of space..the images above give the impression of something being territorial...my OP..and fairy rings are pretty cool..to.
Balance.truth.
william.

Zaya
22nd May 2014, 15:53
First impression as I looked at that photo was:
Michael Tellinger, Ancient Technology, South African Stone Circles, Power Rings!

All over South Africa there are thousands of rings "Man Made?" that have and or produce energy fields!
Is this the same energy from within the Earth producing rings in it's natural state.
In the ancient past natives would have added stones to the rings, maybe?

Any energy with these rings? We need Michael's view and or investigation on this subject ha !

Very interesting post ;)

I like this idea... energy rings! I wonder what kind of energy it could potentially be?

I remember seeing these mysterious rings in the BBC docu-series "Africa", but I can't remember the explanation offered in it (if there was any). BTW that series is AMAZING and beautiful to watch. I own it on Blu-ray, and it is one of my favorites. Seriously worth checking out!

Sidney
22nd May 2014, 16:04
This phenomena reminds me of fish spawning beds. Animals do funny things in order to procreate. I imagine that is what the fairy circles, for some type of insect.

Typical bluegill spawning beds. I have also seen other fish using these, catfish, and bass, and an occasional crappie. But primarily bluegill in one particular local lake here.

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Tesla_WTC_Solution
23rd May 2014, 05:04
those fish are SO CUTE...
had forgotten how hilarious it was in KY and TX when the fish were spawning.

they are so funny... i love animals lol...

_____________

there has to be some sort of explanation..
is there some kind of toxic salt or something in the circles?

could something have "blown" thru like Dune stuff?
turned it upside down?
but it looks gradual not sudden..

i have no idea what to think.,



it reminds me of the prairie dog controversy w/ those dome shapes,
wasn't that your thread too, Sky?

tnkayaker
23rd May 2014, 05:19
Or, it could just be due to fairies.

absolutely! hehehehe