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What the hell are these?

One assumes this is a satellite image of farm fields after they have been harvested.

The pic below is from the upper left corner of the plot:

Tracks.JPG

Notice the parallel vertical lines along the border of the section. Those are either truck tracks, tractor tracks, or four-wheeler's. The "spider" at far upper right is also adjacent to a road.

So, the "spiders" are likely either mud runs created by trucks or 4-wheelers, not likely from the farm, as farmers don't like ruts. They may also be overlapping burns where kids set fires and rode them out as wilding.

It is significant that not a single "spider" in the cluster is detached, meaning they rode from one to the other via the connecting "legs" as roads. The one at upper right is adjacent to a road, so accessed that way.

Those are my guesses.
 
zoom in closer, perhaps. They look like a painting of spiders. Send us the link, please.
Look at the bottom right hand corner. Anybody can get onto Google earth and punch in those coordinates.
 
What ever they are, they are casting larger shadows that distort their appearance. I'm quite sure they are made of plastic pipes. Maybe hot air crop warmers of some sort.

In the section of field north east of the 'spiders' it looks like one of them left a mark on the ground where they had been used.

I realize Google Earth photographers can't catch every location at high noon, but I find the long shadows everywhere a bit disappointing. They really distort the views of trees, buildings, rocks, access roads, even livestock.

By the look of those shadows, I would say the photo was taken early spring around 8 - 9am.
 
After turning the photo a couple times, I'm quite sure they are for irrigation.
 
To many "legs" to be spiders.

And the "legs" are pretty big -- enter the coordinates on google maps and compare to some of the buildings in the area.
Whatever they are, there isn't anything similar in the immediate area. The closest is trees with shadows, but there would be absolutely huge trees!

In favor of them being burns, there are quite a few blackened fields in the area -- but then why are they in those spider-ish patterns, and why didn't the burn spread like in other fields?

Weird.
 
According to Wikipedia, as of 2023, 73% of Turkey's (where these 'spiders' are located) water supply is used for crop irrigation.

Turkey produces a variety of crops.

There are marks where these things have been installed all over the fields in these images. They would have to be moved out of the way to till and plant the fields, and then set up again for drip irrigation. And possibly moved from field to field throughout the growing season.
 
The irrigators sounds plausible.

Shadows would indeed exaggerate the apparent mass of the equipment.
 
12,000,000 year old plastic fossils. From when the Flying Spaghetti Monster created man in its own image.
 
Ok.

Are you ready for the real answer?

Some plants after harvest leaves unwanted parts on the field like roots, body etc. Sun flower for example. Harvesters just cut their heads and leaves the rest on the field.

Farmers make piles of them and burn them on the field. The fires will burn trails across the stubble.

Probably this photo was taken after the piles were burned.

 
Ok.

Are you ready for the real answer?

Some plants after harvest leaves unwanted parts on the field like roots, body etc. Sun flower for example. Harvesters just cut their heads and leaves the rest on the field.

Farmers make piles of them and burn them on the field. The fires will burn trails across the stubble.

Probably this photo was taken after the piles were burned.

You're such a buzzkill.
 
If anyone is still interested, go to Google Earth and go to Turkey to have a look around.

The objects in question are in fields just south of Seyithanbey, and north of Karaseyitali. Sort of north west of Demirkapi. All rather small but kinda interesting farm towns.

There are also a couple of fields with straight irrigation pipes, and some water reservoirs along the creeks.
 
Ok.

Are you ready for the real answer?

Some plants after harvest leaves unwanted parts on the field like roots, body etc. Sun flower for example. Harvesters just cut their heads and leaves the rest on the field.

Farmers make piles of them and burn them on the field. The fires will burn trails across the stubble.

Probably this photo was taken after the piles were burned.


Nope. No sale.:)

Look closely at the repeated shapes of the shadows. These are objects mostly above the ground.
 
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