Landscape Geometry
Here are a selection of short articles on various topics in geometry and landscape I have written over the years.
Here is a video recording of a presentation I gave on my work at the BASES 2022 conference held in Pewsey, Wiltshire, December 2022.
In June 22, 2020, the discovery of the largest prehistoric site ever found in Britain was announced, consisting of a large circular ring of shafts surrounding Durrington Walls henge monument. I recognised at a glance that there was a clear geometrical relationship based on the heptagon between the two landscape forms.
Here is a video of presentation I gave at the Bases Conference 2017 on the subject of crop circles. I've been interested in the topic since the early 1990s. Like many, I was intrigued by the possibility of some kind of non-human origin for the phenomena, but after a sequence of events which began in 2009, I had a profound shift in my thinking.
This map of the world, known as the Beatus map, dates to the 12th century AD. It is a variation on the medieval mappus mundi format, a depiction of the world based on the T-O design. The map hides a secret: it conceals a hidden grid.
The Thornborough Henges are an enigmatic complex of three large henges in North Yorkshire, connected by two long avenues.
They form a pair of alignments which interact with the surrounding landscape and the rising of certain stars on the horizon in the megalithic era.