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the ansty mothership crop circle

4/12/2025

 
The Ansty crop circle of August 2016 was a commissioned artwork by a U.S. glass company, executed by circle maker Dene Hine and his team Clandestine.  Its sheer scale, complexity, and corporate origins left researchers baffled and stirred intense debate within the crop circle community.
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Truly a masterpiece and proof of human creative ability.
Key Facts about the Ansty Crop Circle
• Date & Location: Appeared on 12 August 2016 in a field at Ansty, Wiltshire.
• Design: A vast, highly intricate formation measuring around 110 meters in diameter, featuring geometric motifs and cryptic symbols that resembled an unknown alphabet.
• Commission: Unlike most formations, this was not spontaneous or clandestine. It was reportedly commissioned by a U.S. glass company as a promotional piece, making it one of the rare “commercial” crop circles.
• Circle Maker: Dene Hine, a known circle maker and engineer, was appointed to lead the construction. Drone footage and insider accounts later confirmed his involvement.
• Impact on Researchers: The formation’s enigmatic symbols and corporate link caused confusion. Many researchers initially treated it as a “genuine mystery,” only to later discover its commercial origins. This revelation sparked heated debate about authenticity, artistry, and the future of crop circle research.
Why It Caused a “Twizzle” Among Researchers
• Unexpected Commission: Crop circles are usually anonymous, artistic, or folkloric. A corporate commission disrupted expectations and blurred the line between mystical phenomenon and marketing stunt.
• Cryptic Symbols: The inclusion of strange glyphs suggested a coded message or alien script, which fuelled speculation before the corporate link was revealed.
• Scale & Precision: Its sheer size and flawless execution made it hard to dismiss as “just manmade,” even though evidence later proved otherwise.
• Community Division: Some enthusiasts felt betrayed, seeing it as a dilution of the mystery. Others admired it as a bold piece of land art that demonstrated the skill of circle makers like Hine.

Legacy
The Ansty formation remains one of the most controversial crop circles of the 2010s. It highlighted the artistry of professional circle makers, the vulnerability of researchers to misinterpretation, and the growing role of commercial commissions in the phenomenon. For Dene Hine, it was a showcase of engineering precision and creative flair; for the wider community, it was a reminder that crop circles can be both enigmatic puzzles and deliberate human creations.
The Ansty Enigma (2016)
It rose over couple of nights in a field of Wiltshire—vast, flawless, and cryptic. The Ansty crop circle of August 2016 was no ordinary formation. Spanning more than a hundred meters, its geometry was breath taking, its symbols indecipherable, and its presence impossible to ignore. Researchers flocked to the site, cameras whirring, notebooks filling with speculation. Was this a message? A code? A visitation?
But behind the mystery lay a twist. This was not the work of anonymous artists under moonlight, nor the whispered hand of the unexplained. It was a commission. A U.S. glass company had quietly appointed circle maker Dene Hine to execute the design—a corporate emblem disguised as a cosmic riddle.
For days and weeks, the community was in a twizzle. The glyphs suggested alien alphabets, the scale hinted at advanced technology, and the perfection seemed beyond human reach. Yet the truth was both simpler and more unsettling: artistry had been harnessed for commerce, and mystery had been manufactured for marketing.
The Ansty formation became a mirror, reflecting back the hopes and biases of those who studied it. To some, it was betrayal—a dilution of the sacred mystery. To others, it was proof of the extraordinary skill of human circle makers, capable of producing land art so precise it could rival the myths themselves.
In the end, Ansty was more than a crop circle. It was a parable: a reminder that mystery can be commodified, that belief can be manipulated, and that artistry can be both beautiful and disruptive. For Dene Hine, it was a showcase of engineering mastery. For researchers, it was a lesson in humility. And for history, it remains one of the most enigmatic and controversial chapters in the crop circle saga.
Circle Maker Profile: Dene Hine
Profession: Product engineer, circle maker
Location: Glastonbury, Somerset, UK
Active Years: Early 2000s – 2024
Style & Approach
• Known for precision engineering in crop circle design, often using surveyor’s lasers and meticulous planning.
• Designs range from geometric masterpieces to symbolic tributes, including the angelic formation dedicated to NHS workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.
• Works with small, trusted teams, often under cover of night, blending secrecy with technical mastery.
Notable Works
• Ansty Formation (2016): Commissioned by a U.S. glass company, this enigmatic design became one of the most controversial crop circles of the decade.
• Angel Tribute (2020): A heartfelt memorial to frontline workers, demonstrating his ability to merge art with social meaning.
• Over 100 formations across the UK, each leaving a distinctive footprint in crop circle history.
Legacy
• Revered as both an artist and engineer, Hine’s work pushed the boundaries of what crop circles could achieve.
• His creations sparked debate between believers and sceptics, embodying the tension between mystery and human artistry.
• In 2024, he announced he was stepping back from circle making, citing pressures on farmers and the disconnect between artistic intent and public interpretation.
A rather witty approach to the Ansty Mothership crop circle - enjoy. 


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