UFOs:
Is seeing believing? Retired
UNH professor says the truth is out there For
beings who may or may not have visited Earth, aliens sure have spent a lot of
time in the public eye. The
British Ministry of Defense revealed this month that the number of reported UFO
sightings there rose to 135 last year from 97 in 2006. Details
of reported sightings were released for the first time in 2007, including an archive
dating back to 1998. Sightings were of shapes, lights and formations, according
to British press reports. There
hasn't been a similar increase in the United States, but last month, reports of
a UFO sighting by more than 30 residents of Stephenville, Texas, made national
news. People, including a police officer, local news reporter and pilot said they
saw a large, silent object with bright lights flying low and fast. Ted
Loder, a former University of New Hampshire oceanography professor, is a researcher
with the Disclosure Project, which works to expose evidence of extraterrestrial
life. He lives at the end of a dirt road in Barrington, surrounded by woods where
he says he has a clear view of the stars from the balcony. His
bookshelves are stacked with hundreds of UFO books. By a window, a small object
bearing prisms slowly rotates, sending morning rainbows fluttering around the
room's exposed-beam ceiling. The
Disclosure Project is a nonprofit research organization seeking to disseminate
declassified government documents on extraterrestrials and provide witness testimony
about UFOs. Loder said the knowledge that UFOs are real and visiting Earth first
was established after World War II with the aerial phenomena classified as "foo
fighters," along with the alleged spacecraft crash near Roswell, N.M. "We
knew that this was happening, and we also knew they could fly circles around us,"
he said. Loder
said the acronym UFO was coined to confuse people. "We
know what they are," he said. "They're extraterrestrial vehicles." The
strongest evidence that UFOs have visited the Earth's atmosphere can be found
among hundreds of government documents on the subject dating back to the 1940s,
he said. The Disclosure Project has collected such documents, along with almost
70 expert and military witness accounts. Since the materials were made available
online and otherwise publicized, Loder said, more witnesses have come forward,
with the total now at nearly 500. He
said there are several reasons government officials would keep UFO information
highly classified, including a desire to use alien technology to gain superiority
over other nations. He
also said technology that can travel so far and fast through space would disrupt
the energy infrastructure, making dependency on fossil fuels obsolete a
notion corporate stockholders would reject. Knowing the government knew such technology
existed for decades also likely would enrage the public, he added, given the current
energy crisis and the number of years that evidence has been available. Peter
Davenport, director of the National UFO Reporting Center, a Seattle-based nonprofit
that collects sighting information through a hot line, said the UFO phenomenon
addresses "the most important scientific question that has ever confronted
mankind," which he said is whether humans are alone in this galaxy or not.
But "from
my vantage point, the resounding answer to that question is 'No,' he wrote in
an email to Foster's. Any
fluctuation in reported sightings even if statistically significant
has little value, he argued. It may say nothing about the number of UFOs, if any,
that may be near Earth, he said. There
are probably many recent factors that determine the number of reports to the Center,
including new UFO movies, documentaries about the subject or a dramatic sighting,
he said. He said
he has heard claims that sightings are on the increase in the U.S., but has not
seen evidence to supports that. The center compiles reports by month, and there
has been no dramatic increase in recent years. But
the number of reports has been consistently in the triple digits since the year
2000, with the exception of December 2007, when it was 77. There were 529 reports
in September 2004. Among
the more interesting cases reported to the center is one in Exeter in 2005. A
former U.S. Navy chief petty officer reported seeing a huge, cigar-shaped craft
with multiple windows along its side while mowing his lawn. Davenport,
who said he has decades of experience in the UFO field, wrote for the Derry News
in 1965 about the famous "Incident at Exeter." He said he interviewed
several witnesses in the town, where he had attended high school just before going
to college. That
morning, according to the report, many people saw a peculiar disc-shaped object.
Later, a young man and two police officers saw the object closer, but reported
it moved fast. Peter
Geremia, director of the New Hampshire chapter of MUFON, or Mutual UFO Network,
said any increases could be due to more people watching the skies or being willing
to report sightings. But
the vast majority of sighting reports are misidentification of natural or man-made
events, he said. "It's that last 10 percent or so that is interesting,"
Geremia said. Jason
Lorefice, lead investigator for Paranormal Investigators of New England, based
in South Burlington, Vt., said he isn't aware of any significant reports in the
region recently. The group investigates UFO sightings as well as reports of supernatural,
occult or other unexplained activity. The
region's point of interest for UFO watching is in an area south of Boston known
as the Bridgewater Triangle. It long has been known for reports of unusual and
unexplained activity, with the first UFO sighting dating back to 1760, the Disclosure
Project's Loder said. The
fascination with extraterrestrials continues to grow, with one example being a
new History Channel show called "UFO Hunters," he said. Stratham
resident Kathleen Marden was a guest this month on an episode of the show, which
featured her book about the alien abduction reported by her aunt and uncle, Betty
and Barney Hill. The book, "Captured! The Betty and Barney Hill UFO Experience,"
released in 2007, offered more information on the incident, which the Hills said
happened in 1961 on their honeymoon in the White Mountains. The
Hills' report remains one of the most famous accounts of alien abduction, and
many subsequent sightings have similarities. |