Yoink - I dunno....from the posted photograph, looks like there are lots of stalks bent or otherwise leaning in a certain direction outside of the path of the event, so I am not sure what you have "disproven".
You claimed in an earlier post that wind could not flatten some stalks while leaving adjacent stalks unflattened. This photo disproves that claim. I never said that this photo proves that wind can cause crop circles, or that this photo showed a crop circle.
Ok...so this is what I have thus far, correct as needed:
1) Some crop circles are, or have been, found to be "man made"
2) Some crop circles have not been shown to be hoaxes
3) There may be some type of unknown/undocumented weather phenomena that would case #2
1) Correct (we could happily agree, I'm sure, on changing that to "the vast majority of crop circles are, or have been found to be, "man made").
2) Well, presumptively--that is, having done no research whatsoever into the question I have no idea if there is an instance of a crop circle that has been examined and left examiners genuinely unsure as to its origin.
3) Yes--this is the hypothesis that is under discussion. All that is claimed for the hypothesis is that it is possible (i.e., potentially worthy of further examination), not that it is probable or that it has been in any way proven.
WRT the overhead photo...I don't see any people in that town, so it must be diserted, or otherwise abandoned? Or could it be the overhead photo lacks any meaningful detail?
Either the link isn't working for you, or you're misreading the photograph. There is a "town" in the photo, but only at the top edge of the photo far in the distance. What the photo shows is a series of fields with a very neatly traced tornado track running across it. The track is sharply drawn. This proves that it is possible for a tornado to draw sharp, not chaotic, patterns in a wheat field. It does not prove that they can draw circular patterns, but nor have you offered any evidence to suggest that this would be impossible.
I suggest that if the overhead photo showed any detail, that outside of the actual touch down path you would find "collateral damage"; ie. stalks that are bent, or otherwise leaning, in the direction of the tornados path.
So? Are you saying that a naturally occurring crop-circle that happened to have a few imperfections around its edges wouldn't qualify? If so, you've set the bar so high for what counts as a "crop circle" that I would have to agree with you that anything that would qualify in your view as a "crop circle" would have to be man-made. But that would also seem to be a question-begging maneuver: "All crop-circles that are so completely perfect that they could only be the product of human ingenuity are clearly the product of human ingenuity"--big whoop!
Again, I'm not sure what you've disproven with a photo that lacks significant detail.
I've disproven your claim that it is impossible for tornadoes to leave clearly legible (not chaotically random) paths of damage in a wheat field. That was what required to be demonstrated--or, to kick it old school: Q.E.D.
But, of course, you have irrefutable proof that it is physically impossible for any meteorological effect of any kind whatsoever, known or unknown, to trace clearly legible patterns in wheat. I'm sure you'll be getting around to posting that any minute now, won't you?