Avebury Trusloe DNA
FIELD DESCRIPTION
In July 1996, a DNA double helix formation appeared at Avebury Trusloe in Wiltshire, England, measuring approximately 100 metres in length. The formation depicted two intertwined spiral strands with connecting rungs — a precise rendering of the molecular structure of DNA that had only been understood by scientists for 43 years at the time. The helix made exactly 1.5 full rotations, consistent with the actual geometry of the DNA molecule. Biologist Horace Drew analyzed the formation and noted that the proportions of the helix were accurate to within the resolution of the wheat medium. It appeared alongside several other biologically-themed formations that summer, including the Avebury Hummingbird three years later.
What Are Node Anomalies?
In genuine crop formations, the plant stems are bent — not broken — at the nodes (growth joints). This bending is accompanied by elongated nodes and sometimes expulsion cavities — small holes blown through the node wall from the inside, consistent with a rapid, intense heat source.
Node elongation and/or expulsion cavities confirmed by field investigation. Inconsistent with mechanical flattening.
No node anomalies detected. Formation may be man-made or insufficient investigation was conducted.
Node status not recorded or formation was not physically investigated by researchers.
Research by BLT Research Team (W.C. Levengood, Nancy Talbott) documented node elongation in 300+ formations across 30+ countries. The phenomenon requires a brief, intense electromagnetic or microwave energy source — incompatible with boards and rope.
