07-25-2024, 02:49 AM
Considering they're not meant to exist, flying discs do seem to pop up quite a bit in government documentation..
..and contrary to popular belief flying disc reports also seem to pop up in the literature way back before the 1947 Kenneth Arnold case.
For folks interested there's some relevant research below delving into the historical aspect citing Dewitt Miller's early UFO reports (who was himself sourcing Charles Fort) and the page is well worth a look for anyone with an interest in (or opinion on) the UFO subject.
Link
• Charles Fort - First Ufologist?
Quote:Silver rotating UFO over US Atomic facility
• Flying discs over Hanford Nuclear plant
• Flying disc over Topcliffe
• Circular objects over Langley AFB
• Rotating saucer shaped object over Georgia
• Maxwell AFB Emergency Report - Flying Saucer
• Disc shaped object over Minot AFB - 1966
• Flying disc over Chicago's O Hare airport - 1952
Documents
..and contrary to popular belief flying disc reports also seem to pop up in the literature way back before the 1947 Kenneth Arnold case.
For folks interested there's some relevant research below delving into the historical aspect citing Dewitt Miller's early UFO reports (who was himself sourcing Charles Fort) and the page is well worth a look for anyone with an interest in (or opinion on) the UFO subject.
Link
• Charles Fort - First Ufologist?
Quote:Charles Fort was an early-twentieth-century thinker and writer often credited with "inventing" the supernatural, or the paranormal, by creating a neutral category for anomalous observations, discoveries, and experiences.
Before Charles Fort, anomalies were typically explained away, or else absorbed into pre-existing explanatory frameworks like religion and mythology. Thanks to his efforts, they can now be set aside for further research, even if they're still often ignored in mainstream science.