Public’s UFO Obsession: Sorting Fact, From FictionFrom the fun, such as sightseeing tours of supposed UFO activity hotspots like Roswell, New Mexico, to the serious, with last year’s tense congressional hearings on the subject, a lot of money, resources and time has been spent answering the question: “Are we alone?”
“There are people who will see things that are explainable, but they can’t explain it. So to them, it’s unidentified. Fine. Well, let’s investigate it,” famed astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson told “Impact x Nightline.”
Margaret Weitekamp, the department chair of the National Air and Space Museum, told “Impact” that the phenomenon behind UFOs began in the 1940s and 1950s with the public obsession over flying saucers.
Arguably the most famous incident took place in the summer of 1947 when a rancher found wreckage, including metallic-looking scraps, on his property. This was around the same time that the U.S. Air Force began “Project Blue Book,” an initiative to investigate UFO reports.
“What we know is probably that it was a weather balloon incident, but a lot of lore has risen up around that and around especially secure areas in the American West, where people then ask a lot of questions about what’s really happening there,” Weitekamp said.
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