crop circle distribution maps
 
A new mapping project documenting for the first time the distribution of all known Canadian formation reports on both national and provincial / territorial maps (currently 259 from at least 1925 to 2007). This is the the most comprehensive mapping done of Canadian formations to date, including historical reports from all available research resources (personal accounts, archives, databases, etc.), a significant number of which have been reported to CCCRN over the last several years. Locations for each provincial / territorial map will also be numbered and listed alphabetically for easy reference. The maps will be posted to the web site once completed. These maps will then be later combined with geological maps to further evaluate any possible geological connections with formation locations.
historical circle project
 
The Historical Circle Project documents and catalogues older (pre-1980s) crop circle reports in Canada (before the "modern" phase when the phenomenon first started to become widely publicly known in the late 1980s); such reports continue to be found or heard of in the course of research, often directly from farmers or landowners who recall seeing circles when they were growing up, etc. By far, almost all cases are of simple circles and rings, primarily in the prairie provinces as per the patterns seen in later years and still today. There are currently 24 cases from the 1970s, 27 from the 1960s, 2 from the 1950s, 1 from the 1940s and 1 from the 1920s, as well as earlier possible accounts found in native Indian legends.
corn formations growth study
 
Another research project by the BLT Research Team, Inc. / CCCRN features growth studies being done with samples of hybrid cattle corn (maize) from the two large formations at Abbotsford and Agassiz, British Columbia in 2003. Both formations exhibited significant physical anomalies including multiple expulsion cavities (sometimes in single nodes), often with up to seven or eight affected nodes on one stalk (entire length of stalk), something never seen before. Both of the large, geometric formations, 91 metres (300 feet) and 45 metres (147 feet) long respectively, were in 2.75-3.05 metre (9-10 foot) tall cattle corn. Similar anomalies were also later found in the cattle corn formation at Matsqui, British Columbia in 2004. A full BLT / CCCRN report documenting these findings will be published soon.
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