It is hardly surprising that 1997 was the year in which the still-mysterious Roswell affair reached its absolute pinnacle. It was, after all, the 50th anniversary of the mysterious event: July 1947. Just about everyone who was anyone in Ufology was commenting on, or writing about, the case – mostly from the perspective of promoting
As a follow-up to my previous article on Roswell, I thought I would share with you where I began with the mysterious affair - and why I strongly feel that Roswell was nothing less than a dark and disturbing high-altitude experiment that went terribly wrong. And there was not an alien in sight. In June
On July 28, 1995, the U.S. Government Accountability Office's report on the Roswell affair surfaced from its National Security and International Affairs Division. The GAO’s report did not provide any smoking-guns – such as old B&W photos of dead bodies and wreckage at the crash-site on the Foster Ranch, New Mexico. The report did, however,
Over the decades numerous people in the UFO field have investigated the Roswell affair of July 1947. It was, however, the first hours and days of the event that are the most important. And that's the theme of today's article: focusing on the case from the moment it began and when everything was shut down
In early July 1947, something crashed to Earth, approximately a two-hour drive from the New Mexico city of Roswell. The specific location was the remote, expansive Foster Ranch, in Lincoln County. A rancher named William Ware Brazel stumbled on a huge field of strange debris – tough and very light foil which extended over a