Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Roswell Incident quoted Marcel's later description of the debris as "nothing made on this earth". [ 91 ] [ 92 ] The book claims that in some photographs, the debris recovered by Marcel had been substituted for the debris from a weather device despite no visible differences in the photographed material. [ 93 ]
At Fort Worth Army Air Field, Major Jesse A. Marcel posing with debris on July 8, 1947. On July 8, 1947, RAAF public information officer Walter Haut issued a press release stating that personnel from the field's 509th Operations Group had recovered a "flying disc", which had landed on a ranch near Roswell.
Marcel was the first military officer tasked with investigating the 1947 Roswell incident, where supposed "flying disc" debris was later identified as pieces of a weather balloon. The incident was largely forgotten until 1978, when Marcel, then a retired lieutenant colonel, told ufologist Stanton Friedman that he believed the Roswell debris was ...
Major Jesse A. Marcel (looking right) of Houma, Louisiana, holding foil debris from Roswell, New Mexico UFO crash site, July 1947. ... from the mysterious Roswell incident crash near Corona, N.M ...
Roswell has been a hub for people fascinated by space and extraterrestrial phenomenon since the 1947 so-called Roswell Incident. ... disc” but later saying the debris was merely the remnants of ...
ISBN. 9780448211992. OCLC. 6831957. Website. The Roswell Incident at the Internet Archive. The Roswell Incident is a 1980 book by Charles Berlitz and William Moore. The book helped to popularize stories of unusual debris recovered in 1947 by personnel of the Roswell Army Air Field.
The catalyst for the museum was the 1947 Roswell UFO incident, in which a rancher, W. W. "Mack" Brazel, discovered metal debris outside of Roswell, near a giant trench that spanned hundreds of feet. [4] The International UFO Museum and Research Center shares theories about the Roswell incident and other extraterrestrial life. [4]
The Kecksburg UFO incident occurred on December 9, 1965, at Kecksburg, Pennsylvania, United States, when a fireball was reported by citizens of six U.S. states and Canada over Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Ontario. Astronomers said it was likely to have been a meteor bolide burning up in the atmosphere and descending at a steep angle.