Copyright 2013, InterAmerica, Inc.

Credible testimony that
has been offered truthfully and that is corroborated by others continues to
surface relative to the retrieval of aliens and their craft in New Mexico in
July of 1947. This new round of declarations (gained in recent months by an
assembled team of researchers) attest to the event having indeed been
extraterrestrial in nature. What was said in revelatory ways will be reported
on at a later date.
It is however, something
that can be seen and touched that
is the most coveted of alien crash evidence. Such physical form evidence
is termed the “Holy Grail” by researcher Tom Carey. Things that can be handled,
examined and evaluated by independent experts are sought. Confirmation that is
tangible and quantifiable is desired. We look for evidence that can be
scientifically considered and evidence whose provenance and authenticity is
unquestioned. It is this type of evidence -the ultimate evidence – that would
definitively end the debate about Roswell forever. Has the pursuit of such
proof borne fruit at last? Has the Holy Grail finally been found?
Just as witness statements
continue to be carefully evaluated for truth, so too are the claims of physical
evidence.
ROSWELL AND THE TYPES OF PHYSICAL EVIDENCE
There are four primary
types of physical crash evidence: debris, alien remains, photographs and
documents. And at least one of these types may yet see the light of public day:
Crash Debris

The scattered, fragmented
remains of the craft crashed near Roswell left a large debris field. It is
possible that the craft lost materials of construction before it crashed- or
that it may have even “skipped” to additional sites, leaving debris in its
wake.
The types of people
identified who would have most likely to have been out in the middle of the
desert in July in New Mexico –and who could have had access to the debris and
an opportunity to purloin pieces for private interest- would be:
1)
Ranchers (and their
children)
2)
Archaeologists (on
expedition)
3)
Geologists (on oil
exploration)
4) Servicemen from Roswell Army Air Field and
/or other bases (assigned to debris field cleanup)
There have been many
“false starts” when it comes to purported Roswell debris:
-
In 1996 Art Bell, a one-time
paranormal radio show host, had received and reported on what became known as
“Art’s Parts.” Touted by people such as Linda Moulton Howe, the “parts” were
sent from an anonymous source and were square-like metal pieces that turned out
to be primarily aluminum with traces of other metals.
-
Also in 1996, a man
presented a piece of shard-like metal with an unusual swirling pattern to the
International UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell. It was later found that the fragment was
actually a piece designed by a Utah jeweler and made in his studio.
-
In 1997 Dr. Roger Lier and
Derell Sims held a press conference during the Roswell 50th
Anniversary to offer up a bluish stone-like artifact that was going to be
tested for alien origin by “universities.” Nothing more since.
-
In 2004 a New Mexico
gentleman named Chuck Wade found some seemingly unusual metal material buried
in the desert using a metal detector. While the material does seem very heat
resistant (and by eye is not immediately identifiable) the kind of testing
required by a named and recognized laboratory to validate the material is for
now lacking.
-
In 2011 New Mexico school
teacher Frank Kimbler claimed to have found ET metal fragments in the desert.
He claimed the material had “unusual” isotopic ratios. But the truth is that such anomalies cannot
be determined without use of extremely expensive and sophisticated analyzers
made only by Thermo Electron Instruments. They are used to examine the isotopic
ratios of such things as fallen meteors. They are found only at NASA, related
government agencies and a very few universities. It is not believed that this
is what Kimbler has done. Though he mailed off some of the material for some
type of analysis, he later claimed that the material had mysteriously
“disappeared” in shipping. Today, interest and discussion about his material
has waned.
For any such debris or
engineered material to be deemed of extraterrestrial origin would require one
of the following:
1)
That it was composed
of an element that is unknown to earth or science
2)
That it was composed
of known elements but that occur in non-terrestrial isotopic ratio
3)
That the processes
required to alloy or form the material are unknown to science
4)
That the physical
properties exhibited by the material are not found in terrestrial material and
are unknown to science.
Alien Remains

There would be nothing
more that we would like to do (and skeptics would like us to do) than to roll
out a gurney carrying the corpse of one of the aliens fallen at Roswell. Even a bone piece or tissue sample would
certainly suffice.
But this of course is the
very least likely type of evidence that would ever surface into the public
domain. Any such pathological evidence
is likely held in preservation in guarded, highly secure facilities whose access
is extremely restricted.
Photographs

A picture image in the
form of prints or slides of an object, person or scene that is related to the
Roswell crash would be eye-opening evidence.
And such film could be in black and white or in color. A genuine image of an alien corpse or of the
Roswell retrieval operation in the debris field would be a very convincing
item.
Perhaps of all of the
types of physical evidence that might exist, this type (until recent efforts)
has been the least researched. It also may be the one to prove most fruitful.
Cameras were not unknown
to common folks in the late 1940s, and that included ranchers. If you were
going to go out to see a fallen flying saucer, you would surely grab your
camera if you had one. And professional people who may have been out in the
desert at that time (such as archaeologists or geologists) would be equipped
with a camera to document their finds. Or perhaps a serviceman surreptitiously
photographed such film.
Personal Documents

Personal documents such as
a diary from July of 1947 with entries relating to the Roswell crash could have
been left by neighboring ranchers or their children, by involved servicemen or
their families or by members of involved civilian agencies such as the fire
department or sheriff’s office. Similar documentary evidence would include
letters and written correspondence or saved printed materials.
Two Confirmed Examples:
1)
An historical
personal document of this type is in fact confirmed to exist. Sheriff George
Wilcox’s (of Lincoln County, NM where rancher Mac Brazel brought crash debris)
had a wife named Inez. Inez did compose a memoir that
touches on the Roswell crash. She called it "Four Years in the County
Jail” and her family states that it was done with thought for publication in a
national magazine. Now at the Roswell Historical Society, the memoir says:
"One day a
rancher north of town brought in what he called a flying saucer. There had been
many
reports all over the United States by people who claimed they had seen a flying
saucer.
The rumors were in many variations… Mr. Wilcox
called headquarters at Walker Air Force Base formerly RAAF) and reported the
find. Before he hung up the telephone almost, an officer walked in. He quickly
loaded the object into a truck and that was the last glimpse that anyone had of
it… However the officer who picked up the suspicious looking saucer admonished
Mr. Wilcox to tell as little as possible about it and refer all calls to the
base. A secret well-kept."
2)
Other documents that have surfaced include ones from
reporter Frank Joyce. Joyce was in Roswell in 1947 and was a newsman with radio
station KGFL. Joyce also talked to rancher Mac Brazel (who originally
discovered the debris field) and Joyce maintained that Brazel told a very
different story to him than Brazel had made publicly in the press after
coercion from the military. Joyce had the feeling at the time of the crash
event that things might be covered up or in some way ‘forgotten’ about the
crash. So Joyce did something very unusual: He collected the UPI and news
service teletypes received by the station about the crash as they were coming
through the wire machine. And Joyce retained these original teletypes and
showed them to researchers many decades later to provide documentation that
something important really did happen that fateful day.
THE
POSSIBILITY OF PHYSICAL PROOF
Claims of physical proof demands rigorous testing.
Identifying experts and conducting such testing and authentication requires
resources, time and money. But it may yet well be worth that effort, wait and
expense as the stream of such claims continues and is evaluated by a team of
Roswell investigators that now turn their attention to the tangible.
AJB


































