Mysterious 'Fairy Circles in Africa are Alive'
Circles of the Fae
or the Sidhe are not that uncommon on the land. I once nearly walked into one,
and then stopped and walked round it ~ not out of fear of being taken, but out
of respect. W B Yeats' Mythologies consists of many interviews he undertook
with Irish country folk at the beginning of the 20th century who had no doubt
that rings on the land which appear and disappear, for no particular reason,
were the circles of the fae. If these ones in Africa turn out to be authentic,
we will have to start to rethink crop circles.
Walter Tschinkel
may not have solved the mystery of the fairy circles, but he can tell you that
they're alive. Tens of thousands of the formations—bare patches of soil, 2 to
12 meters in diameter—freckle grasslands from southern Angola to northern South
Africa, their perimeters often marked by a tall fringe of grass. Locals say
they're the footprints of the gods.
Scientists have thrown their
hands up in
the air. But now Tschinkel, a biologist at Florida State University in Tallahassee,
has discovered something no one else has.
![]() |
Fairy circle after rain |
So Tschinkel
turned to satellite images. By comparing photos taken over a 4-year period, he
confirmed something other scientists had suspected: The circles were alive—or
at least they were dynamic. A number of circles appeared and disappeared over
this time period. Extrapolating from the data, Tschinkel calculated that most
smaller circles arise and vanish every 24 years, whereas larger circles last up
to 75 years. Overall, the lifespan averaged 41 years.
To confirm his
results, Tschinkel crunched data collected from the NamibRand Nature Reserve.
Over the past 10 years, the park has sold fairy circles to ecotourists for
about $50 each. The buyers don't actually get the land; they just adopt it—kind
of like people who "purchase" stars. Each circle the reserve sells is
marked with the date of sale, and new owners are given the latitude and longitude
so they can check up on their purchase on Google Earth.
Tschinkel's
friends at the reserve revisited the sold fairy rings and took photos to
estimate the amount of regrowth that had occurred over the years. From the
number of fairy circles that had died or started to die over the past 2 to 9
years, Tschinkel calculated that the fairy circles had an average age of about
6 decades. "It gives me some confidence that we really are talking about a
lifespan of about 30 to 60 years," he says.
Very few
researchers have taken the time to investigate the fairy circles, and their
work is usually based on opportunistic experiments done on quick trips,
Tschinkel says. "There's no program really focused on trying to figure
this out."
Fairy circle aficionados
are impressed. "Tschinkel does deliver a superb product for a one-man
band," says Carl Albrecht, the head of research at the Cancer Association
of South Africa, who occasionally researches and publishes on the mysterious
spots as a hobby. "These are beautiful synergies between Google Earth,
satellite photographs, aerial photographs, and actual observations on the
ground."
In the future,
Tschinkel hopes to return to the region to conduct tests at different times of
year, as some of his data indicate that circles tend to form after the rainy
season. He acknowledges that he may never get to the bottom of what causes the
fairy circles—and that's just fine with others. During a recent trip, a local
conservationist told Tschinkel that he hopes the fairy circles remain a mystery
for years to come. "I certainly can sympathize with that sentiment,"
Tschinkel says. "But that doesn't mean I'll stop trying to
understand."
From Science Now
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.