Biophysicist
 Dr. W. C. “Lefty” Leavengood passed away September 28, 3013 at his home
 in Grass Lake, Michigan with friends nearby. Levengood was a retired 
member of the Physics Department of the University of Michigan, and a 
former professor of Biophysics at the Institute of Science and 
Technology.
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| Photo by CAlesky@fotolia.com | 
Willaim
 Levengood was the owner of Pinelandia Biophysics Laboratory in Grass 
Lake Michigan and was well known for his pioneering work in the area of 
plant biology. Leavengood studied plants found in crop formations, doing
 biochemical and biophysical analysis of plants and soil anomalies. He 
printed his findings in the journal Physiologia Plantarum in 1994 and 
1999.
In
 his 1994 paper Levengood found that certain deformities in the grain 
inside the circles were correlated to the position of the grain inside 
the circle. Among his findings were that bent plants produced five times
 the normal amount of seed compared to plants outside a crop circle. He 
also found that plant stems appeared to be blown out from the inside, 
indicating that the plant had been exposed to microwave radiation. He 
found similar traits in crops at cow mutilation and UFO landing sites. 
Levengood also wrote the paper “A Study of Bovine Excision Sites from 
1993 to 1997,” published through his laboratory.
| W. C. Leavengood in his lab with Edd Edwards Courtesy of Edd Edwards | 
Leavengood
 tested and studied individuals who have been in contact with ET's and 
people like Edd Edwards, finding that he and others like him were able 
to produce high levels of energy which may facilitate healing and other 
actions. Levengood discovered glassy particles in the dust of 
individual's homes who suspected they had ET contact. His paper 
“Evidence for Charge Density Pulses Associated with Bioelectric Fields 
in Living Organisms,” (Journal of Subtle Energies and Energy Medicine) 
covers this subject.
Levengood
 was commended by researchers in the UFO and Crop Circle community for 
his serious study of anomalous phenomena. He was one of only a few 
researchers worldwide with an impressive list of credentials, 
well-respected in academia, who breached normal protocol to cross the 
line into uncommon study. 
William C. Levengood was a consultant for BLT Research Team, Inc., headed by Nancy Talbott.  BLT Research supplied many of the plants for  study.
 Their combined paper “Dispersion of energies in worldwide crop 
formations” and other scientific papers are available at 
www.bltresearch.com.
 
 
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