Inside the mystical world of crop circle tourism - 1
Published 21 Oct 2018, 08:05 BST
A young girl explores a crop circle near Sixpenny Handley in Dorset, England.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicA group of Americans on a sacred tour to Glastonbury perform a ritual in the centre of a crop circle in Dorset.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicCrop circle enthusiasts lay down for a ritual in Dorset.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicA couple from the United States explores the interior of a crop circle.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicAmerican tourists perform a ritual in the centre of a crop circle.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicPeople explore a new crop circle near Hackpen Hill, Wiltshire, which was reported on June 23, 2018.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicA crop circle near Yarnbury Castle, Wiltshire, cuts across neat rows of crops.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicA child plays in a crop circle during dusk near Sixpenny Handley in Dorset.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicAn intricate crop circle decorates a field in the English countryside.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicAmerican tourists perform a ritual in the centre of a crop circle near Sixpenny Handley in Dorset, England.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicCrop circle tourists lie down in a crop circle in Dorset.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicTim Gallagher stands for a portrait inside a crop circle near Cerne Abbas. "I find the sacred geometry in many crop circle designs beautiful—whoever made them," Gallagher says. "As a musician, I take direct inspiration for my duo, Angels of Black Goo. We make music based on laws of resonance and geometric forms.”
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicA crop circle near Winterbourne Stoke Down, Stonehenge, Wiltshire, is carved into a verdant field.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National GeographicA woman stretches inside a crop circle near Hackpen Hill, Wiltshire, which appeared in June 2018.
Photograph by Robert Ormerod, National Geographic