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UFO sightings were explained as conventional aircraft, balloons, stars, planets, meteors, optical illusions, solar reflections, or even "large hailstones." Project officials recommended that the project be reduced in scope because the very existence of Air Force official interest encouraged people to believe in UFOs and contributed to a "war ...
The film includes footage or archival interviews with Kenneth Arnold, who coined the phrase "flying saucer" after his 1947 sighting; Maj. Jesse Marcel of the Roswell incident; ufologist Jacques Vallee, whose research uncovered the "Pentacle Memorandum"; witnesses to the Ariel School, the Westall UFO, the Lonnie Zamora, and the Rendlesham Forest ...
The Cash–Landrum Incident was an unidentified flying object sighting in the United States in 1980, which witnesses claimed was responsible for causing health and property damage. Uncharacteristically for such UFO reports, this resulted in civil court proceedings, though the case ended in a dismissal.
How ex-Blink 182 member Tom DeLonge helped shine a light on UFO encounters. Wednesday 26 July 2023 21:30, Oliver O'Connell. With a declassified report due to be handed over to the Senate ...
The existence of the Calvine photographs was first reported by former Ministry of Defence desk officer Nick Pope in his 1996 book Open Skies, Closed Minds based on his experiences logging UFO sightings reported to the MOD while assigned to Sec(AS)2 on what was known as ‘the UFO desk’, from 1991 to 1994.
The project was established in 1948 by Air Force General Nathan Farragut Twining, head of the Air Technical Service Command, and was initially named Project SAUCER. [1] The goal of the project was to collect, evaluate, and distribute within the government all information relating to UFO sightings, on the premise that they might represent a national security concern.
Bruce Maccabee's page on the Kaikoura UFO sightings – includes his article on same published in Applied Optics. Air Force: Kaikoura UFO Explainable Archived 28 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine, UFO Casebook Magazine, December 2010 – link to RNZAF files for 1956–1979 including their Report on Kaikoura UFO's (go to 10th pdf at this link).
The Lonnie Zamora incident was an alleged UFO sighting that occurred on April 24, 1964 near Socorro, New Mexico when Socorro police officer Lonnie Zamora claimed he saw two people beside a shiny object that later rose into the air accompanied by a roaring blue and orange flame.