Soon after clicking around America's new online database containing hundreds of thousands of historical UFO records, you may begin to wonder why the government has spent a lot of time and taxpayer dollars collecting data on a phenomenon that it doesn't seem to believe in.
As a casual observer taking a quick look at the database—an ongoing project of the National Archives, the government's repository of historical documents—you'll see many images of fake-looking flying saucers. You'll hear recordings of military personnel talking at length about various sightings, concluding that there was no credible evidence that what was observed was a UFO. You'll find a ton of grainy images and films of bright dots in the sky, as well as black-and-white 20th-century newsreel footage.
But if you dig around the somewhat clunky database, you might also discover some intriguing records. For example, a 2013 blog post mentioning a Popular Mechanics news brief that same year about an Air Force project to build a flying saucer. Surely, that would pique your interest.
"The Air Force, especially, has spent a significant amount of time trying to say 'there is nothing here,'" and yet it and other government agencies have continued to investigate UAP reports, says Robert Powell, an engineer and author of UFOs: A Scientist Explains What We Know (And Don't Know).
"Why would you collect all that information if you did not believe there was something to at least a portion of it? … You'll see some really interesting reports there in that data that indicate there's something to the whole UAP subject, but you have to look for it," says Powell, who is also co-founder of the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies (SCU), a nonprofit that includes scientists and researchers who apply scientific methods to the analysis of UFO sightings. |
Soon after clicking around America's new online database containing hundreds of thousands of historical UFO records, you may begin to wonder why the government has spent a lot of time and taxpayer dollars collecting data on a phenomenon that it doesn't seem to believe in.
As a casual observer taking a quick look at the database—an ongoing project of the National Archives, the government's repository of historical documents—you'll see many images of fake-looking flying saucers. You'll hear recordings of military personnel talking at length about various sightings, concluding that there was no credible evidence that what was observed was a UFO. You'll find a ton of grainy images and films of bright dots in the sky, as well as black-and-white 20th-century newsreel footage.
But if you dig around the somewhat clunky database, you might also discover some intriguing records. For example, a 2013 blog post mentioning a Popular Mechanics news brief that same year about an Air Force project to build a flying saucer. Surely, that would pique your interest.
"The Air Force, especially, has spent a significant amount of time trying to say 'there is nothing here,'" and yet it and other government agencies have continued to investigate UAP reports, says Robert Powell, an engineer and author of UFOs: A Scientist Explains What We Know (And Don't Know).
"Why would you collect all that information if you did not believe there was something to at least a portion of it? … You'll see some really interesting reports there in that data that indicate there's something to the whole UAP subject, but you have to look for it," says Powell, who is also co-founder of the Scientific Coalition for UAP Studies (SCU), a nonprofit that includes scientists and researchers who apply scientific methods to the analysis of UFO sightings. |
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