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A Short Introduction to UfologyThe acronym UFO - for Unidentified Flying Object - is
so prevalent and commonplace today, that it's easy to forget the term
is not even fully fifty years old yet. There is even some dispute
about the acronym's exact origin. In his classic account of his years
spent as the director of Project Blue Book - the Air Force's
official UFO "investigation" agency - Capt. Edward J. Ruppelt says
unequivocally that "UFO is the official term that I created to replace
the words 'flying saucers'" (Report on Unidentified Flying
Objects, Doubleday, 1956, p. 6). Presumably, this would have been
sometime between 1951, when Ruppelt took over Project Grudge, later
renamed Blue Book, and September of 1953, when he left the agency and
the Air Force. Elsewhere in the same book, however, Ruppelt says of
Project Grudge's final 600-page report, released in December of 1949,
that it was "officially titled 'Unidentified Flying Objects -
Project Grudge, Technical Report No. 102-AC-49/15-100. But it was
widely referred to as the Grudge Report." This would mean that some
long forgotten anonymous Air Force staffer coined the phrase at least
two years before Ruppelt did. But perhaps Ruppelt is only claiming
credit for the coinage of the acronym itself?
At any rate, UFO has now entered into common usage and
appears in most dictionaries, along with ufology, the study of UFOs,
and ufologist, one who studies UFOs. In many ways, the term
is a "loaded" one in that it implies classification or designation
prior to a proper analysis or thorough investigation. As commonly
employed, UFO has also come to imply a spaceship, or vehicle, of
extraterrestrial manufacture and origin. In reality, well over 90
percent of all reported UFOs prove to be IFOs - Identified Flying
Objects - upon investigation. IFOs can be anything from distant
airplane landing lights to the planet Venus, with ball lightning,
weather balloons, and other astronomical and meteorological phenomena
thrown in for good measure.
In strictest terms, a UFO is just that - an apparent
unidentified flying object, origin unknown. The best
scientifically accepted definition of a UFO is probably that provided
by the late astronomer J. Allen Hynek, who said that the UFO is simply
"the reported perception of an object or light seen in the sky or upon
the land the appearance, trajectory, and general dynamic and
luminescent behavior of which do not suggest a logical, conventional
explanation and which is not only mystifying to the original
percipients but remains unidentified after close scrutiny of all
available evidence by persons who are technically capable of making a
common sense identification, if one is possible." (The UFO
Experience: A Scientific Inquiry by J. Allen Hynek, Henry
Regnery, Chicago, 1972, p. 10.) For more than 20 years, Hynek was the
Air Force's astronomy consultant to Project Blue Book and its
predecessors, up until the former's closing on December 17, 1969. A
few years afterwards, Hynek formed the Center for UFO Studies that now
bears his name. He also contributed two other terms - one
inadvertently and one purposefully - to the popular lexicon: "swamp
gas" and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind."
Shortly before the UFO there was the flying
saucer. On June 24th, 1947, private pilot Kenneth Arnold was
winging his way near Mt. Rainier in Washington state, when he spied
nine, shiny crescent-shaped objects at some distance and
traveling at speeds he estimated to be well over 1,000 mph, far in
advance of any known terrestrial craft of the time, the new jet
technology included. Arnold told Associated press reporter Bill
Bequette that the objects behaved like a rock or saucer skipping
across water. An anonymous headline writer then coined the phrase
"flying saucers" to describe what Arnold had seen, even though the
objects he reported were crescent, not saucer, shaped.
By any name, however, flying saucers and UFOs have
continued to puzzle us in the half-century since the end of
WWII. Once regarded as almost exclusively an American
phenomenon, like hamburgers and baseball, UFOs have now been reported
from virtually every country in the world. No classification or
category of humanity, from the average man or woman in the street, to
physicists and astronomers, is immune to the UFO phenomenon. According
to a several-decades-old Gallup Poll, more than ten million
American adults alone are estimated to have seen what they believed to
be a UFO, a phenomenon that most skeptics routinely dismiss as
non-existent by definition. In reality, whatever that reality is, UFOs
are arguably the most widely reported unexplained mystery of this or
any other century.
Although the modern UFO era is typically dated to Arnold's
landmark 1947 sighting, there is tantalizing evidence that the heavens
have long been inhabited by similar "apparitions" and manifestations,
even when there weren't handy words with which to describe
them. The collected books of Charles Fort (1874-1932),
sometimes considered the father of ufology, run to 1062 pages. In the
whole, there is but a single illustration, a line drawing on page 280
of The Book of the Damned (his first book) that accompanies
an account Fort culled from the pages of the Journal of the Royal
Meteorological Society. The account was an extract from the log
of Capt. F. W. Banner aboard the bark Lady of the Lake, dated
March 22nd, 1870.
Sailors had seen a remarkable object, or "cloud," which
they reported to the ship's captain. "According to
Capt. Banner," Fort wrote, "it was a cloud of circular form, with an
included semicircle divided into four parts, the central dividing
shaft beginning at the center of the circle and extending far outward,
and then curving backward."
The thing was light gray in color and much lower than the
other clouds. It "traveled from a point at about 20 degrees
above the horizon to a point about 80 degrees above," moving from the
south, southeast, where it first appeared, to the northeast, traveling
against the wind. "For half an hour this form was visible," writes
Fort. "When it did finally disappear [it] was not because it
disintegrated like a cloud, but because it was lost to sight in the
evening darkness."
Aside from the extraordinary duration - most UFO sightings
are a matter of minutes or seconds - this 1870 event replicates many
of the characteristics common to UFO sightings more than a century
later. These include the circular shape, the gray, metallic
color and the ability to travel against the wind, which would
seemingly rule out such mundane sources as weather balloons and - the
skeptics' favorite - airborne hoaxes of a hot-air nature, i.e., kites
or plastic bags with candles attached. Needless to say, any reliable
1870 or earlier sighting would also rule out the easy IFO
"explanations" of airplane landing lights, satellites, advertising
blimps and so on.
While it is true that rumor, speculation and tabloid
sensationalism surround the UFO subject, it is with the collection,
analysis and verification, as far as possible, of sober reports like
the above that MUFON and other responsible UFO organizations are most
concerned. The phenomenon can and should be approched
dispassionately and scientifically from a variety of angles,
perceptual, psychological and sociological, to name but a few. If
objects from another planet are indeed visiting ours, what form of
propulsion system and other technologies are employed? What kinds of
biological lifeforms might be onboard? What God or gods will they
worship? And how will UFO occupants - now or in the future, immediate
or remote - perceive humans: as mental, emotional and spiritual equals
or as vastly subpar inferiors? Should the skeptics prove right, in a
"worst-case" scenario, and UFOs turn out out to be nothing more than a
convoluted space age myth of our own making, surely our perceptions of
the UFO phenomenon will tell us much about the contents and inner
working, the built-in "plumbing" of the human mind and perhaps
consciousness itself? In either event - including other scenarios and
potential explanations as yet unformulated - many unanswered questions
remain. It can hardly be against human nature, or the scientific
method in principle, to ask and to seek answers to those questions. We
welcome your assistance! |