Four circles around a central circle are both a Celtic cross and the most common
symbol among the Maya in ancient Mexico. The sixth circle surmounting the Celtic cross is in the north
and the flare-like extensions point northwest. A spiral resembling the design of the Dreamspell logo was
in the small circle closest to the oregon border. Dar Addington reported that, "It didn't
have the long "legs", just the center design." The plow
lines in the lower left of the photo run parallel to the Oregon border, and one of them actually touches the border. Walla Walla
is situated north of Umatilla, Oregon, near nuclear, biological and chemical weapons (NBC's) storage depots.
Near the ancient boundary of the North American tectonic plate, Walla Walla is 45 miles east of Kennewick, Washington.
Walla Walla, Umatilla and Kennewick are
in a prime target area for geothermal well production with intense internal heat upwellings. These upwellings occur in areas where the Earth's
magma rises close to the surface along deep fault lines. Dar Addington reported that a well digger at Walla Walla brought up water so hot that
it had to be mixed with cool ditch water before it was used for irrigating crops.
The first crop
in Washington State was made at Kennewick May 29, 1993. Kennewick literally borders the Hanford Nuclear Reserve where nuclear operations have
ceased since the 1993 crop circle appeared. This is not to say that the nuclear works shut down because of the crop circle but that
the formation was coincident with major fault lines running through the nuclear reserve in an area noted for fireballs since the first settlers entered
the region. Situated on native Yakima lands, Hanford is the #1 Superfund site on the planet. Thousands of acres have been given back to the tribe for clean-up in the last six years.
An experimental gravity project is now being conducted on remining portions of the Hanford facilities which included an underground area of unknown size.
Both Walla Walla and Kennewick were on the main trail used by Native Americans for travel to northern areas of what is now Canada and are
historically important sites. After a heavy rainfall in 1995, an 11,000-year-old skeleton washed out of a creek bank at Kennewick, known as the Kennewick Man.
In the ensuing legal battle between scientists who wanted to study the Kennewick Man and natives tribes who wished to bury his remains, examination
revealed that he was Caucasian. An 11,500-year-old camp site of a bison hunting shaman who was Native American in nearby Wentachee was discovered
around 1990 suggests that the region was well traveled at the time of the last glacial melt.