Top 10 Alien Sightings
Top 10 Alien Sightings
Posted By: Deepak Kumar
Apparently, the pageantry surrounding the
royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton was so entertaining even
extraterrestrials couldn't resist checking it out. At least that was the scoop
from The Sun, a British tabloid. It ran stills lifted from a two-and-a-half
minute video clip shot by a visiting tourist that showed a blurry blob the
paper characterized as a "shimmering white object" hovering in the
cloudless sky over Westminster Abbey on the morning before the wedding.
"It changed shape, but stayed there for at least 30 minutes," the
tourist explained in an Internet posting. "Then I lost sight of it."
Skeptics might explain the ambiguous images as
lens distortion, vapor trails from an aircraft, or perhaps just wishful
thinking. But to believers in UFOs, the sighting provided yet another chapter
in the vast annals of possible sightings of alien visitors. The National UFO
Reporting Center, which makes its headquarters in a former underground nuclear
bunker in Harrington, Wash., posts an estimated 5,000 new sightings annually to
its online database, and maintains records on as many as 70,000 potential
glimpses of extraterrestrial visitors, going back to the 1950s, according to
Seattle Weekly. But UFO believers say that reported sightings go back as far as
ancient times, when the Hebrew prophet Ezekiel described seeing fiery wheels
touch down on land, apparently piloted by strange creatures with animal faces.
Evaluating the credibility of UFO sightings is
a daunting task, since the absence of a clear-cut explanation for an incident
doesn't automatically prove that an object is of alien origin, and there's
often a paucity of physical evidence or data from scientific instruments
available to bolster witnesses' visual observations. But as any student of
physics will tell you, there's no such evidence to prove quantum mechanics
either, and yet scientists nevertheless seem confident that it's real. With
that in mind, here are 10 of the most interesting, provocative, influential
possible alien sightings on record. Draw from them whatever conclusions you
like.
10: Circa 600 B.C. --
Ezekiel's Wheels in the Sky
In the 6th century B.C., the Hebrew prophet
Ezekiel, who was 30 years old at the time, was walking along the Kebar River,
probably in what is now Iraq, when he saw an immense storm cloud coming out of
the north, surrounded by lightning. In the center, he saw what looked like
glowing metal, and four winged creatures who each had multiple humanoid and
animal faces. According to Ezekiel 1:1-28, when the visitors landed, Ezekiel
saw that each of the visitors was riding on what "appeared to be made like
a wheel intersecting a wheel." The vehicles moved with the creatures,
rising with them as they rose from the ground. Above the creatures was
"what looked something like a vault, sparkling with crystal, and
awesome," which contained a seated humanoid figure who seemed to be made
of glowing metal from the waist up.
Ezekiel took it to be a vision of God
accompanied by angels, but modern UFOologists, noting the similarity between
the creatures' vehicles and more recent descriptions of flying saucers, have
questioned whether what he observed was actually a visit by extraterrestrials.
9: 1561 -- UFO
Dogfight over Nuremberg
Two German broadsheets -- the 16th-century
equivalent of newspapers -- now preserved in a Zurich library depict a bizarre
incident that occurred on April 16, 1561, in the skies over Nuremberg, Germany.
An eyewitness, professional illustrator Hans Glasser, made an engraving that
shows a variety of enormous objects -- globes, airplanelike flying crosses, and
long cigar-shaped tubes -- flying overhead and engaging in aerial combat. Two
of the objects in the illustration have crashed and left smoking wreckage on
the ground.
Glasser wrote that "this dreadful
apparition occurred on the sun, and this was seen in Nuremberg in the city,
before the gates and in the country -- by many men and women." He notes
that "the globes flew back and forth among themselves and fought
vehemently with each other for over an hour … they became fatigued to such an
extent that they all … fell from the sun down upon the earth as if they all
burned, and then eventually wasted away on the earth with immense smoke."
In his book "Flying Saucers -- A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the
Sky," early 20th-century psychoanalyst Carl Jung speculated that the scene
described by Glasser actually was some sort of symbolic vision, summoned up
from mankind's collective unconscious. But UFOologists suspect that he actually
was describing a conflict between different groups of space aliens.
8: 1639 -- UFO over
Massachusetts
The precise day is lost, but sometime in 1639,
Massachusetts colonial governor John Winthrop recorded in his journal what may
be the first-ever UFO sighting from United States soil: "One James
Everell, a sober, discreet man, and two others, saw a great light in the night
at Muddy River," Winthrop wrote, using the then-common name for the
Charles River, which flows through the Boston area.
The object, which Winthrop recounts was about
9 feet long (2.7 meters), ran "as swift as an arrow" up and down the
length of the river for two to three hours. At times, the object contracted --
oddly, into what witnesses described as "the shape of a swine." Lest
we assume that Winthrop was delusional or telling a tall tale, he assures us
that "Divers(e) other credible persons saw the same light, about the same
place." James Savage, who edited Winthrop's journal in 1835, attributed
the sighting to "some operation of the devil," but UFO enthusiasts
see it as a possible account of an extraterrestrial visit.
7: 1860 -- Fiery Red
Balls Buzz Delaware
Weird stuff is supposed to happen on Friday
the 13th, but this incident might be the weirdest of all. On the evening of
July 13, 1860, virtually the entire city of Wilmington, Del., was lit by a pale
blue light, and residents looked into the skies to see what appeared to be a
200-foot-long (61-meter) object flying about 100 feet (30 meters) over them. A
contemporary news account in the Wilmington Tribune reported that the object
"moved in a straight line without any inclination downwards" and gave
off "sparkles in the manner of a rocket."
The UFO apparently had an entourage. It was
preceded by a pitch-black cloud flying in front. And bringing up the rear,
about 100 feet (30 meters) apart, were three "very red and glowing
balls." As the object turned toward the southeast over the Delaware River,
a fourth red glowing ball appeared. After eight minutes, the mysterious object
turned east and disappeared from view, according to "The UFO Book of
Lists."
6: 1942 -- The Battle
of Los Angeles
We're not referring to the recent cinematic
sci-fi thriller, but to an actual event that occurred in the early days of
World War II, shortly after a Japanese submarine surfaced near Santa Barbara
and fired 15 shells at an oil facility. While the only attack against the U.S.
mainland didn't do any damage, it put anti-aircraft batteries in California on
edge. Thus, when radar picked up an unidentified object 120 miles (193
kilometers) to the west of Los Angeles in the early morning hours of Feb. 25,
1942, operators watched anxiously as what they assumed to be a Japanese
aircraft zoomed to within a few miles of the coast, only to vanish suddenly
from their screens.
According to the book "The Air Raid
Warden Was a Spy," sometime after that, an artillery officer along the
coast reported seeing what he believed were 25 aircraft flying at 25,000 feet
(7,620 meters) over the city of Los Angeles, and a few minutes later, others
saw a balloonlike object carrying what appeared to be flares over adjoining
Santa Monica. The anti-aircraft batteries then erupted in a fury, firing 1,400
rounds of ammunition at what various witnesses later described as
"swarms" of objects, flying at speeds of up to 200 miles per hour
(322 kilometers per hour) at altitudes from a few thousand to 20,000 feet
(6,096 meters). Oddly, none of the fire hit anything, because no wreckage was
found afterward, and 40 P-38 fighters who arrived soon afterward to defend the
city found no enemy aircraft to fight. The official explanation was a false
alarm, exacerbated perhaps by mass hysteria -- though some also suspected a
clever psy-op staged by the Japanese, using civilian light aircraft launched
out of the Mexican desert. But believers in UFOs wonder if extraterrestrials
were the real explanation.
5: 1947 -- The First
Flying Saucer
On June 24, 1947, while flying his two-seater
plane near Mt. Rainier in Washington state, aviator and businessman Kenneth
Arnold saw nine otherworldly objects flying in a formation. Arnold described
the objects as flat and shaped like pie plates, "with a sort of convex
triangle in the rear," and said that they moved erratically, like a fish
flipping in the waters of a stream. Newspapers modified Arnold's description to
the catchier-sounding "flying saucer," and a new pop culture term was
born, according to a local Idaho newspaper.
The U.S. Air Force dismissed the
three-minute-long sighting as an optical illusion, but UFO believers weren't
dissuaded. Though Arnold tried to stay out of public attention, in 1977, he did
make a rare appearance at an international conference on UFOs in Chicago, where
he added additional detail. The objects were shiny and pulsating, he recalled,
and had been moving as fast as 1,700 miles per hour (2,736 kilometers per
hour). He also said that they "seemed to be alive in the center, to have
the ability to change their density." According to the Associated Press,
he was careful to add: "I know that sounds strange."
4: 1952 --
Extraterrestrial Tourists Visit the U.S. Capital
At 11:40 p.m. on July 19, 1952, an air traffic
controller at Washington National Airport spotted seven unidentified objects on
the radar screen, about 15 miles (24 kilometers) to the southwest of the
nation's capital city. "Here's a fleet of flying saucers for you," he
jokingly told his supervisor, according to the Washington Post. But the mood
changed to high alarm when a second controller at another facility revealed he
not only had the objects on his screen, but could see "a bright orange
light" through the window of his control tower. Pretty soon, other objects
on the screen were moving toward the White House and the U.S. Capitol building.
Shortly after that, an airman at nearby
Andrews Air Force Base reported seeing a strange orange ball of fire, similar
to what one of the controllers had described, followed by a second ball. At
12:30 a.m., one of the objects buzzed a runway at National, and another
controller got a glimpse of it. He described it as an orange disk, and said
that it hovered at 3,000 feet (914 meters) over the airport before
disappearing.
When jet fighters from a base in Delaware
scrambled to confront the apparent intruders, the objects mysteriously
vanished, only to reappear after the fighters had run low on fuel and returned
to base. Finally, they left the area just before sunrise. A civilian radio
engineer in the suburbs described them as five large disks, flying in loose
formation. After a repeat visit by what appeared to be similar objects on July
26, President Harry Truman called Capt. Edward J. Ruppelt, the supervisor of
the Air Force's Project Blue Book, a secret probe of UFO reports, and asked him
to find out what was going on. Ruppelt told the president that the objects on
the radar screen probably were a false reading, caused by a temperature
inversion in the atmosphere. That explanation, of course, didn't account for
the eyewitnesses. Subsequently, though the Air Force continued to insist that
nothing untoward had happened, the White House reportedly gave a shoot-down
order if the objects returned.
3: 1974 -- Ronald
Reagan sees a UFO
When former President Jimmy Carter revealed
that he'd seen a UFO, he was the subject of widespread mockery. But it largely
escaped notice that the man who eventually would succeed Carter in the White
House, former California Gov. Ronald Reagan, also had once seen a mysterious
object in the sky.
In 1974, by various accounts, Reagan was being
flown over Bakersfield in a small plane when he and his pilot both spotted a
glowing white light, several hundred yards away in midair. The object
subsequently changed shape and became elongated, and then gained speed and
disappeared. Reagan made little mention of the incident thereafter in his
political career, but there are hints that his apparent close encounter
influenced his thinking. In a speech to the U.N. General Assembly in September
1987, he lamented the lack of a common cause to unite countries and compel them
to work together. "I occasionally think, how quickly our differences
worldwide would vanish if we were facing an alien threat from outside the
world," he said.
2: 1997 -- The Phoenix
Lights
On the night of March 13, 1997, a Phoenix man
named Tim Ley and his family looked north out the windows of their Phoenix home
and saw an array of unusual lights in the sky that seemed to be moving in their
direction. As they watched, the array flew directly over them, and they got a
good look at what appeared to be an enormous V-shaped craft, several city
blocks across.
After an investigation, the U.S. Air Force
came up with an explanation: The lights actually had been flares dropped by an
aircraft in training exercises at a nearby base. But that explanation failed to
satisfy many people who'd seen the flying V -- including then-Arizona Gov. Fife
Symington, who himself had seen the mysterious sight. "I'm a pilot and I
know just about everything that flies," he explained in a 2007 news
conference. "It was bigger than anything that I've ever seen."
1: 2008 -- Aliens in
North Carolina
On the evening of Feb. 20, 2008, at about
10:40 p.m., a 47-year-old former U.S. Army helicopter pilot was outside his
home in Fayetteville, N.C., watching the lunar eclipse from his front porch. In
a report filed with the National UFO Reporting Center, he notes that he
suddenly noticed a bright, round object that "clearly was not a naturally
formed object," traveling in a straight line from the left side to the
back side of the moon, in what appeared to be a straight line toward the Earth.
The object then made a 90-degree turn to the former pilot's right, directly in
front of the face of the fully eclipsed moon. After that, it suddenly
disappeared to the moon's right side. The entire event lasted less than five
seconds.
The witness, who assures he is "not a UFO
nut" and has 20/12 and 20/15 vision in his eyes, recounted: "This
object made intelligent turns and in relation to the position of the moon, was
travelling at a fantastic rate of speed." His name was redacted from the
report for privacy reasons.