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Coming back to the beginning....

I'd agree with you here, any object has resonance and bombarding a crystal structure with ultrasound may well produce electricity that is detectable.

However, it is man who is doing the bombarding, so this is an artificially created thing that would be detected, not a naturally occuring phenomena.

The start of this thread is really about circles being a focus for power in the first place, without manmade external input and specifically about this power fluctuating at set times during the day.

The ultrasound experiments must be an attempt to measure this by using ultrasound to amplify the effect to make it detectable, which I find a questionmable approach (not that I know anything about it), since the origin of this supposed power is not understood, the right way of amplifying it is not understood either.

There may well be a change in the overall hatmonic resonance of rock due to cooling at night for example, and this may be detectable using ultrasound. But what does that prove?

I'm with you there BN, I'm assuming that the ultrasound mentioned was used as a way of producing some sort of measurable energetic effect rather than the method used to detect the effect (i.e. that the power surge was some kind of ultrasound). Without any clarification as to what kind of "power" the alleged surge was, how could it be tested? Without any chance of replicating the effect no-one is ever going to really take a report seriously.