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Sky-sign page

The crop-circle and Wiltshire sky-sign thread has its own page here.

It brings together Mary Alice Bennett’s crop-circle review and sky-sign article cluster in one place. It keeps the path honest: one review-driven geometry thread, two preserved 2012 sighting articles, and the wider Avebury / Pewsey Vale / Alton Barnes landscape that gives the thread real ground beneath the glow.

Artwork from Mary Jill Alice Roe Bennett used to introduce the crop-circle territory page
Three preserved anchorsThis page stands on a visible cluster: the 2010 Circles of Dreams review, the July 2012 crop-circle-territory sighting article, and the August 2012 follow-up update.
Wiltshire groundAvebury, Silbury Hill, the Vale of Pewsey, Honeystreet, and Alton Barnes give the thread a stronger landscape identity than a floating UFO thread.
Geometry plus witnessThe subject matters because it holds both meditative crop-circle geometry and direct eyewitness-report language in the same visible publication thread.
Connected across the tributeThis material now connects directly to Publications, Places, Sources, Research Projects, and the adjacent anomalous-experiences page instead of staying scattered across article cards.

Signal field

Enter the crop-circle territory thread through geometry, chalk landscape, dusk witnesses, and a page that feels like signal moving through the landscape.

The page keeps the visual mood strong without faking certainty. It treats the crop-circle cluster as a real thread in her body of work: Bennett’s bylined review, Bennett’s bylined 2012 update, the preserved sighting testimony, and the very specific Wiltshire terrain around Avebury, Silbury Hill, Pewsey Vale, Honeystreet, and Alton Barnes.

Review thread

The thread begins with geometry, not only sightings.

The Circles of Dreams review lets the page stay visual and meditative, because crop circles enter the archive first as patterns, maps, and mandala-like forms.

Witness reports

The 2012 articles keep the page grounded in reported observation.

Instead of forcing belief, the page preserves what the bylined pages actually hold: named landscape, timing, eyewitness language, and follow-up testimony.

Terrain pressure

The landscape itself gives the page its atmosphere.

Avebury, Silbury Hill, Pewsey Vale, Honeystreet, and Alton Barnes already carry prehistoric and crop-circle gravity, so the page can feel cinematic without becoming hollow.

Record and Context

The strongest visible components of the crop-circle territory thread.

The review, the witness reports, and the Wiltshire setting can all be described without asking the site to certify the phenomenon itself.

Circles of Dreams makes the thread visual and reflective.

Bennett’s December 2010 review frames crop-circle geometry as something people can study through coloring and meditation. The page explicitly links the book to Jungian mandalas, Wiltshire maps, ley lines, Stonehenge, Silbury Hill, and the county’s white-horse landscape.

Review threadGeometryWiltshire maps

The July 2012 article preserves an eyewitness drive across crop-circle country.

The preserved article quotes an avid crop-circle photographer describing a dusk drive from Silbury Hill / Avebury toward Devizes and later Upavon through the Vale of Pewsey, where a bright golden light was seen moving over crop fields.

Vale of PewseyAveburyWitness report

The August 2012 update widens the witness field.

The follow-up article adds another report from Alton Barnes / Golden Ball Hill / St. Bernard’s crop-circle territory and a second observer note about glowing orange or white lights. Bennett also connects that discussion to her own Tucson white-diamond light memory, which helps this thread touch the adjacent anomalous page without collapsing into it.

Alton BarnesGolden Ball HillUpdate article

Wiltshire already holds the right physical stage.

Avebury sits inside the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage landscape; Silbury Hill is one of its best-known monumental forms; and Honeystreet / Pewsey already hosts a dedicated crop-circle visitor centre. That means the page can stay atmospheric while still leaning on real, public geography.

AveburySilbury HillHoneystreet

Why It Endures

It gives the crop-circle material a dedicated place beyond a single bibliography card. It ties the review, the sightings, the places page, and the sources page together in one sequence readers can actually follow.

Publications bridgePlacesSources

Archive note

This page preserves what the visible record contains: review language, quoted witness testimony, and public landscape context. It does not ask the archive to settle whether the reported lights were extraordinary, only to show that the thread itself is real and coherent.

Source-firstWitness languageTrust model

Why It Endures

  • It gathers the crop-circle and sky-sign material into one page instead of leaving it scattered across bibliography cards.
  • It gives the archive a Wiltshire thread, widening the places page beyond Tucson, France, and Mesoamerica.
  • It lets the site add context without overstating what the record can support.
  • It connects the crop-circle review, witness articles, places page, and sources page into one readable sequence.

What Remains Open

The material stays close to the public record. It relies on preserved Mary Alice Bennett article paths, quoted witness language, and public Wiltshire landscape sources. If stronger direct recovery for the related August 1, 2012 crop-circle title appears later, the page can deepen without overstating what is known now.

Keep reading

Crop-circle territory in context.

From here, the strongest next paths are Publications for the article sequence, Places for the Wiltshire terrain, Sources for the evidence map, and Anomalous Experiences for the adjacent sky-sign voice path.