A
History of Strange Things in the Sky:
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| Some claim that
UFOs have been visiting the earth since ancient times. Author Erich von
Daniken sees evidence of these ancient astronauts in the records our ancestors
left. He sites art that includes flying beings, stories of visitors from
the sky and archaeological oddities as proof. While evidence that would
convince most scientists is lacking, certainly the idea that we were visited
by extra-terrestrial beings in the past has it appeal and Von Daniken was
able to write several successful, if somewhat inaccurate books, on the
subject. |
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| Certainly
there are stories about men seeing things in the sky since ancient times.
A sailor board columbus's ship, the Santa Maria, saw a glittering thing
in the distance. At the end of the 19th century America experienced a flap
of "airship" sightings across the nation. During World War II pilots spotted
strange lights in the sky that neither seemed to be friendly or enemy craft
and nicknamed them "foo fighters." The modern history of UFOs, though,
perhaps begins in 1947 with an Idaho businessman and pilot named Kenneth
Arnold. While flying near Mount Rainier, Washington, Arnold spotted a formation
of nine silvery, disc shaped objects flying in and out of the mountains
of the Cascade Range. He estimated their speed at some 1,200 miles per
hour, more than twice as fast as any known aircraft of that day. |
| He
described the disc's movements to a reporter as "like pie plates skipping
over the water." In his story the next day the reporter coined the term
"flying saucers" and the label stuck. Sightings like Arnolds, and more
fantastic stories including actual contact with occupants of the saucers,
and rumours that the U.S. government had salvaged a crashed alien spaceship,
flourished in the late 1940's. |
| In response
the U.S. government created a group to investigate these reports. Operating
under several names, the most well known being "Project Blue Book", the
Air Force continued to investigate UFO reports for some twenty years. Project
Blue Book hired Dr. J Allen Hynek, an astronomer at Ohio State University,
as a consultant to the project. While a sceptic himself he became disillusioned
with Project Blue Book, which had never been staffed with more that two
or three people and given a low priority, saying it was nothing more than
a "public-relations effort designed to debunk the whole thing." While not
believing that UFOs where actually alien spaceships, Hynek did come to
believe that there was indeed a real phenomenon at work warranting scientific
investigation. |
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| Hynek
continued to work gathering information about UFO sightings without the
help of the United States Air Force. He, with other interested UFO researchers,
formed the Centre for UFO Studies at Evanston, Illinois. Hynek and his
colleagues have been responsible for organising UFO reports into a classification
system based on criteria like the distance of the sighting and the time
of day. |
| Hynek's
group broke down sightings into two major categories: Closer than 500 feet
and further than 500 feet. These majors groups were then broken down into
nocturnal visual observations (the majority of reports), daytime visual,
and radar visual (where the object is observed both by eye and on radar).
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Three
Kinds of Encounters:
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| The Centre for
UFO Studies also categorises contacts with UFO's based on the amount of
interaction with the witnesses as "Close Encounters" of the first, second,
or third kind. Encounters of the first kind are usually reports of objects
in the sky or unexplained lights. Encounters of the second kind are marked
by the UFO having some kind of tangible effect on the Earth environment,
such as burn marks or radioactivity. Close encounters of the third kind
include reports of interaction been the witnesses and the crew of the alien
spaceship. |
|
| There
are also a group of reports that can be termed " alien abductions". These
are stories of people who claim they were actually forced aboard a UFO
by the occupants. Typically the subjects are examined by the aliens, then
released. While these reports are rare when compared to the number of close
encounters of the first or second kind, many people from different walks
of life have reported this strange experience.
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Identified
Flying Objects
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| Almost any man-made
object that flies has also been mistaken for a UFO at one time or another.
Kites, balloons and aircraft can all seem unfamiliar when seen at strange
angles and in poor lighting. Experimental or secret military aircraft may
also account for a few sightings. Power lines, displaying an effect similar
to the natural occurring Saint Elmo's Fire, are undoubtedly the source
of a few UFO reports given how often UFOs are seen near high voltage transmission
lines. |
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| Hoaxes |
A small portion
of UFO reports is fraudulent. Either the person reporting the sighting
has filed a false report, or someone has purposefully used some special
effect to fool the witness into thinking he has seen something he hasn't.
A UFO hoax, in general, is not illegal, so there is little to restrain
someone from using one for a practical joke. Occasionally a charlatan attempts
to use a hoax for profit, though more often it seems that the perpetrator
is looking to feel important or gain recognition. Hoaxes can be difficult
to spot and many only come to light when the hoaxer confesses his story. |
UFO
in Entertainment
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| The
image most people form of UFOs, flying saucers and alien abductions is
through entertainment media like books, movies and television. There is
no doubt that what people see and hear in entertainment affects their perception
of what they expect to see when dealing with UFO's. It is reported, though
disputed, that after the success of the movie. Close Encounters of the
Third Kind, in 1977, UFO reports surged. Entertainment certainly seems
to affect the way we view aliens themselves. Movies have portrayed extra-terrestrial
visitors as evil human eating monsters in Species to gentle kind creatures
in ET.
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If They Are Out
There, Where?
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| If we do assume
there is intelligent life in places other than Earth, where might they
be? Though scientists last century thought the planet Mars might be a good
candidate, and some even thought they detected a huge canal system stretching
across the planet, recent probes sent to Mars have failed to detect even
bacteria-like creatures, let alone a civilisation capable of producing
a flying saucer. With the rest of the planets in our solar system seemingly
too hot or cold, the best hope for intelligent life seems to be across
the void of interstellar space in other parts of our galaxy. |
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| In
an attempt to detect intelligent life beyond our solar system researchers
have conducted a number of SETI programs trying to use radio waves to detect
the existence of other civilisations. So far no SETI program has been successful
in finding intelligent life, but there are millions of stars in our galaxy
alone that might have planets that could harbour life and carefully looking
at each one of them will take a long time. |
| Is
there intelligent life on other planets? Have they visited us on Earth?
Are some UFOs alien spaceships? Or are there other explanations for saucers
in the sky? Nobody has final proof one way or another. We need to keep
open eyes and open minds. |