CROP CIRCLES
 

THE SEMITIC SCRIPT SYMBOLS

AT

ALTON BARNES, ENGLAND

July 11, 1990

Pictures of this display were published in various journals and news media. When I first saw it I was startled because of the similarity of the "appendages" of the circles to Semitic script symbols I had studied in years past. In August, Insight magazine published my letter in which I indicated these similarities, and the meaning of a significant Hebrew word which those symbols represented.

That word was "Khawah."  We know it in English as Eve.  

Refer to the attached photograph.

This is from The Crop Circle Enigma, Gateway Books, Bath, England, 1990, Edited by Ralph Noyes.

The nearest concentric circles has an "E" appendage.

The solid second circle has a "Tuning Fork" appendage set off to the right.

The solid fourth circle has a three-finger "Pitch Fork" sticking up to the left.

I show magnified views below, top to bottom. The quality of the pictures is poor because of loss of resolution in the expanded scale.


 


 
 


 

Refer to the photographs on the Semitic Script symbols.  

In the Table from page 338 the "three-finger" symbol pointing to the left in Old North Semitic represents the letter "h."  In the Table on page 291 you can see that uses of this symbol by the Phoenicians and other Punic people had the fingers pointing in both directions.  This symbol later became our letter "e."

(Old North Semitic included Hebrew, Phoenician, and Chaldean.)

On these same pages the "two-finger" fork represents the letter "w."

The letter "kh," the guttural "h" sound, is more uncertain.  (This is shown as an "h" with a dot under it in the tabulations.) You can see that it had different representations in different old languages.  Script writing in 500 BC was in a fluid state.  No standard scripts existed as we have today.  Each group used their own distinctive representations for sounds.  Although the sound did not have standard representation you can see that the "triple fork" was used prominently for "kh."  The usual representation for "kh" in the Old North Semitic languges was two vertical lines with three horizontal bars.  However, you may note that the "three finger" vertical fork was not used otherwise, except in the Iberian representation of the letter "t."

Reading from the top down on the first photograph we find the symbols in the order "kh," "w," and "h."

Ancient Semitic languages did not represent vowel sounds.  Because of the nature of their inflectional system the vowels

could be easily inferred from context.  Thus the word shown by the crop circle formation at Alton Barnes was "Kh-w-h," or "Khawah."  And this is the Hebrew word for Eve.

The question then is why the circle designers would use the word Eve.  Was it unique in some way?  Could they have chosen a different word?  What were they trying to convey?

One can imagine all kinds of combinations for three-letter words.  Or even more.  Two letters is difficult because such words could represent more than one concept, but usually of primitive value.  Three letters keeps the message in reasonable bounds while still conveying significant meaning.

Eve becomes important because of her role in the parentship of mankind.  Although I do not subscribe to the idea that she was the first mother, she certainly was important.  She and Adam were biological uplifters.  And they defaulted.  Eve was the one who created the great sin of copulating with another man.  Refer to my analysis under The Legacy of Adam and Eve.  Thus we have our celestial visitors bringing our attention to her critical role in the present state of mankind.

I took this "message" quite personal because of the work I had done on identifying Adam and Eve from our historic planetary past.  Refer to my book.

You should note that ability to "read" this "message" depends upon several factors.  An individual must have the background to recognize the symbols.  He must be interested in both ancient history and modern "celestial" displays.  Thus the number of people who could have recognized the "message" is quite small.