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Roswell UFO incident

The Roswell UFO incident refers to a purported crash of an unidentified flying object (UFO) in Roswell, New Mexico, USA.

Some ufologists and much of the general public have shown interest in the Roswell Reports. Many books and a number of TV movies have been made concerning the alleged events, both fictionalized and more serious studies of the reports.

Some supporters of the extraterrestrial hypothesis consider the Roswell case among the most important recorded events, while skeptics point to a lack of evidence and inconsistent eyewitness accounts.

Contents

Overview

During the first week of July 1947, Mac Brazel, a ranch farmer from New Mexico, discovered a large amount of strange debris scattered widely over his ranch in Corona, New Mexico. The debris possessed physical properties unfamiliar to Mr. Brazel and his neighbors; it resembled aluminum foil and, when crumpled, straightened back up. Apparently it could not be burned, cut, or physically harmed at all. After the rancher informed local authorities, military personnel arrived, retrieved the debris, and transported it to Roswell Army Airfield; the debris was later flown to Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio.

Initial Air Force press releases reported that a "flying disk", "hexagonal in shape" had been recovered crashed in the desert, although the story was rapidly changed to say that the crash was in fact a weather balloon. Some conspiracy theorists charge the change in reports was disinformation and that the U.S. government was withholding or suppressing information.

The Roswell Incident received national attention in 1947, but after the "flying disk" news report was replaced by the weather balloon explanation, the event faded from the mainstream.

Renewed interest

Until 1978, the Roswell incident received little mainstream attention, when researchers Stanton T. Friedman and William L. Moore compared notes from a series of interviews each had conducted independently.

Friedman and Moore interviewed Lydia Sleppy, who worked at an Albuquerque, New Mexico, radio station in 1947, and United States Air Force Major Jesse A. Marcel . Sleppy claimed that Air Force personnel had stopped reports of the flying disk and its non-human occupants from being publicized. Marcel reported gathering unusual materials near Brazel's ranch.

Perhaps the most credible report regarding the Roswell Incident comes from retired Air Force General Arthur Exon, as related to ufologists Kevin Randle and Donald Schmitt. In 1947, Exon was stationed at Wright Patterson Air Force Base. Shortly after the reports of the saucer crash, Exon said strange material was shipped to Wright Patterson. Though very thin and lightweight, Exon said the metal could not be bent, dented or scorched.

By 1961, Exon had been promoted to a General, and was Wright Patterson’s base chief. In order to have access to classified information in the U.S. government, one must have both the proper degree of classified clearance as well as a need to know the information. As a consequence, Exon was denied access to portions of the base where UFO-related studies were ongoing, and was never briefed regarding their findings.

A similar incident in the UK in 1980 called the Rendlesham Incident increased the amount of interest in Roswell.

Analysis

Some ufologists have argued an alien craft crashed near Roswell. It is also said that an alien body was found at the crash site, and then moved by military to the infamous Area 51 in Nevada. Official reports state that the body was actually a dummy often used during tests.

In 1994, the "Roswell case" was officially closed (see [1]), though Ray Santilli, a British film producer, produced a film in 1995 supposedly showing the autopsy of an alien from the crash; however, this film showed the alleged surgeons utterly disregarding both conventional surgical and scientific procedure, and for this reason--and many others--is widely considered spurious. However, the autopsy film also has certain elements that make it possible that it was indeed filmed in 1947. Generally, the film is considered to be either a hoax by Santilli, or a real 1947 film that does, for some reason, show the autopsy of a rubber mannequin. Some ufologists argue that the film might be an authentic alien autopsy.

The question remains that if it wasn't a flying saucer, why the initial reports of UFOs and government secrecy? Here are some explanations proposed by Karl T. Pflock in his book Roswell: Inconvenient Facts and the Will to Believe:

  • The initial report of a UFO crash by the military was the blunder of a particular officer suffering from an attack of hubris and caught up in the desire to "scoop" the biggest story he could see, which involved the growing number of UFO sightings. See Kenneth Arnold.
  • What crashed in the desert was a balloon with a long train of equipment, and this balloon was of a top secret project – Project Mogul, hence the government secrecy.
  • Several years later, an aerial tanker crashed near Roswell and the crew's badly-burned bodies were found. Pflock suggests that this crash merged with later reports in some witnesses' minds, and accounts for unusual reports.

However, if it was a crash of an extraterrestrial craft, as many continue to insist, then some ufologists would argue that several things follow:

  • The United States government knows that extraterrestrials have visited our planet but will not admit that fact.
  • The U.S. government is currently in possession of alien technology.

As of now, there is still no definite proof to either cause, nor are any of the above conclusions logically implied by the premise. The official denial of anything of an extraterrestrial origin continues, while the conspiracy theorists continue to insist that the officials are lying. It is important to note that many people who believe the incident to be a crash of an alien vessel are not familiar with all the details of this case and its analysis. This is to say that not all believers are actually ufologists who have researched the Roswell case seriously.

For most ufologists, the Roswell case is considered one of the most important UFO events and the one that started the alledged UFO cover-up, while for the skeptics it's just the most widely popularised case, not specifically notable. The official position of the United States government, as of 2005, remains that nothing of a paranormal or extraterrestrial nature had happened. The final report of the US officials regarding the Roswell case is available, as well as the answer to that report by ufologists, who insist that the report is bogus (see External links).

There is some speculation that the Roswell incident is the result of a broken arrow: an accident involving a nuclear weapon. Marcel, a staff intelligence officer with the 509th Bomb Group Intelligence Office, was responsible for the initial press release that a "flying saucer" had crash-landed. Some have proposed that Marcel created the cover story of a UFO crash, rather than admit that a nuclear weapon had accidentally fallen out of military hands.

Further refuting the UFO theory, recent evidence suggests that the debris was in fact the remains of an observation balloon being used in Project Mogul, a top-secret attempt at examining nuclear activity in the Soviet Union. The balloons used in Project Mogul were extremely strange-looking and would have appeared other-worldly to observers, and the project itself was so heavily classified it is still nearly unknown outside of the higher branches of the US government.

A Roswell investigator named David Rudiak has attempted to read the text on a paper held by Gen. Ramey in a photo taken with Maj. Marcel and some of the debris. Rudiak claims to have identified several phrases, including "victims of the wreck" and "aviators in the 'disk'". Rudiak believes this is evidence that the Roswell incident was actually the crash of an alien spacecraft. Rudiak also claims to have disproved the calculations done by supporters of the Mogul balloon hypothesis. (See [2]).

Influence

Int'l UFO Museum & Research Center, Roswell
Enlarge
Int'l UFO Museum & Research Center, Roswell

Today, UFO tourism is a major income for people around Roswell. The place has also been featured in many books, comics, movies and television series.

In the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Little Green Men", the craft had come from the 24th Century, and the aliens were the Ferengi characters Quark, Rom, and Nog. Similarly, in Futurama, the characters came from the 31st Century, and the captured alien was Dr. Zoidberg.

In the movie Independence Day, the Roswell craft was a scout from the alien's mothership.

In the TV series 7 Days, technology from the Roswell crash led to a secret time-travel device.

The most elaborate example was probably the Roswell television series which ran for three seasons.

In the DC Comics universe, the official explanation is that it was a "crashed Dominator scoutship", but this is widely discounted as being a cover story. The humorous comic book "Roswell", from Bongo Comics, had as its hero the little green man, also called Roswell, who was found in the craft.

The movie Hanger 18 was loosely based on Area 51 and alien technology (Hanger 18 in Area 51 is allegedly where the UFO wreckage was taken).

Additionally, in 2003, the Sci-Fi Channel funded a scientific investigation at Roswell that revealed some anomalies, and collected many samples of local soil.

Sources

  • Jerome Clark, ‘’Unexplained! 347 Strange Sightings, Incredible Occurrences, and Puzzling Physical Phenomena’’, Visible Ink Press, 1993.
  • Kevin D. Randle and Donald R. Schmidtt, ‘’UFO Crash at Roswell’’, Avon Books, 1991

External links

Last updated: 05-07-2005 11:48:31
Last updated: 05-13-2005 07:56:04