Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The photos were reprinted in Life magazine and in newspapers across the nation, and are often considered to be among the most famous ever taken of a UFO. [1] UFO skeptics have concluded that the photos are a hoax , but many ufologists continue to argue that the photos are genuine, and show an unidentified object in the sky.
The United States military maintains that what was recovered was a top-secret research balloon that had crashed, whereas many ufologists believe the wreckage was of a crashed alien craft. The incident has evolved into a recognized and referenced pop culture phenomenon.
The Rhodes UFO photographs, sometimes called the shoe-heel UFO photographs, [2] purport to show a disc-like object flying above Phoenix, Arizona, United States. [1] The two photographs were reportedly taken on July 7, 1947, by amateur astronomer and inventor William Albert Rhodes .
This tiny town northwest of Dallas and Fort Worth was the site of a widely publicized UFO sighting on April 17, 1897. A cigar-shaped unidentified flying craft (note this was years before the ...
The Passaic UFO photographs are a set of photographs purportedly taken in Passaic, New Jersey by George Stock on July 31, 1952. Allegedly depicting a domed flying saucer, the images were widely published in contemporary media. [1] Ufologist Kevin D. Randle called the Passaic photos the "most spectacular" of the 1952 flap but characterized them ...
A newly released image showing the UFO that was shot down by a US fighter jet over Canada in 2023 has added more questions and uncertainty to the object floating over the Yukon.. The grainy ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... UFO sightings in the United States; 0–9. 1947 flying disc craze; 1952 Washington, D.C., UFO ...
• NA, United States; about 30 mi. north of Roswell, New Mexico: Walter Haut, a United States Army Air Forces spokesperson, issued a press release announcing the "capture" of a "flying saucer". Hours later, the Army announced that the find was a crashed weather balloon.