Les soucoupes volantes ne datent pas d'aujourd'hui

Elles ont été observées et signalées dans pratiquement les mêmes termes depuis des siècles, dit un auteur qui a trouvé 300 récits ancients.

En 1872, longtemps avant qu'il y a des avions ou des ballons-sonde en plastique, la Société Météorologique Royale de Grande-Bretagne reçu un rapport étrange du capitaine du voilier Lady of the Lake.

Alors qu'il était en direction de chez nous vers l'Angleterre depuis des ports tropicaux, l'équipage du navire a attiré l'attention du capt. Frederick William Banner sur une observation incroyable dans le ciel coloré du coucher de Soleil.

Le capitaine Banner l'a par la suite décrit dans son journal de bord comme un nuage des plus curieux. Il était circulaire, gris clair, et lumineux. Il ressemblait, écrivit-il, au Soleil ou à la Lune avec un halo autour. De plus, il ne se comportait pas du tout comme un nuage. Il se déplaçait dans le sens contraire du vent, s'élevant depuis un point au sud-est où aucun autre nuage ne se trouvait à ce moment, jusqu'à être pratiquement à leur verticale. Là il resta stationnaire brièvement, et les marins étonnés virent qu'il avait des inscriptions étranges et une queue distincte, comme celle d'une comète. Le capitaine Banner nota que des bouts de cirro-cumulus semblaient jaillir de l'arrière. Puis l'objet effrayant se dirigea vers l'horizon, toujours contre le vent, et disparut au nord-est alors que l'obscurité s'installait.

Le capitaine Banner envoya une copie de son journal à la Société Météorologique Royale. Lors de la réunion suivante de la société, le mercredi 15, le rapport fut lu, discuté, et écarté comme inexplicable.

Des observations sembables déconcertent encore aujourd'hui les scientifiques. Beaucoup des soucoupes volantes vues ces dernières années se sont révélées être des ballons-sondes. Mais un porte-parole de l'Air Force a admis ce printemps, qu'un certain nombre des observations rapportées ne peut être expliqué ainsi, et tant que c'est le cas, l'Air Force continuera d'étudier le problème.

While pondering this problem, Robert L. Unger, who is now a technical writer for the Republic Aviation Corp., of Farmingdale, L. I., began to wonder how long such strange things had been appearing in our sky. Unger flew B-25s in the Pacific theater of operations during the war, and later did graduate work at Yale. While there, he began prowling through the long history of "saucer stories."

He reports now that he has found evidence that the men have been seeing things which resemble saucers for at least 355 years. He has collected, he says, 300 such reports as the one from Captain Banner that mystified the Royal Meteorological Society 80 years ago.

Mystic's Work Started It

The books of a man named Charles Fort, half scientific writer, half mystic, who died in 1932, inspired Unger to continue this fascinating research. Fort had paged through hundreds of scientific journals, some of them dating from the sixteenth century, and extracted accounts of strange happenings in the sky that science had never been able to explain.

Unger, beginning in 1948, followed in Fort's path, eagerly picking out the reports that sounded like current newspaper accounts of flying-saucer sightings. He carefully tracked down every source, and found at least half again as many new ones. The 300 accounts he has gathered date from 1907 back to the late eighteenth century.

Of all the baffling reports that the Air Force has received since 1947, when "flying saucer" entered the language, some of the hardest to explain have been those concerning the Lubbock Lights. That is the name that has been given to mysterious groups of luminous spots which several responsible citizens of Lubbock, Tex., repeatedly saw travel noiselessly across the night sky in 1951 at tremendous speed and in distinct flying formation, usually V-shaped.

Seen by Navy in 1904

When Unger read the first reports from Lubbock, he immediately remembered an experience reported in the U.S. Montly Weather Review in 1904 by Lieut. F. H. Schoefield, aboard a Navy supply vessel at sea.

Shortly after six o'clock on the morning of February 28, the lieutenant and two members of his crew were staggered to see what appeared to be three meteors hurtling towards the ship in a tight little group from the northwest.

"At first," Schoefield reported, "their angular downward motion was very rapid and their color a rather bright, glowing red. But as they approached the ship they suddenly soared upward at an angle of 45 degrees and passed through the clouds. After rising above the clouds their angular motion became less and less until it ceased, when they appeared to be moving directly away from the earth at an elevation of 75 degrees and in a west-northwest direction."

The largest meteor, which Schoefield said looked as large as six suns, was egg-shaped and let the formation. The two others were perfectly round, one appearing to be the size of two suns, the other the size of the sun itself. When they shot away from the ship in the direction from which they had come, "there was no change in their relative positions."

When the newspapers, beginning in 1948, told of terrifying bright green fireballs that hundreds of people in the Southwest had been flash across the bare hills in straight, silent, horizontal flight, Unger recalled a strikingly similar ccount account that he had come across in an old issue of a magazine called The Observatory. The writer, a professional British astronomer, said the most remarkable experience he had ever had took place one clear evening in the autumn of 1882.

"A Disk of Greenish Light"

"A great circular disk of greenish light suddenly appeared low down in the east-northeast, as though it had just been risen, and moved across the sky, as smoothly and steadily as the sun, moon, stars, and planets move, but nearly a thousand times as quicky," he wrote. As it moved, in "a steady, uniform progress from east to west," it lengthened out. "When it crossed the meridian and passed just above the moorn, its form was that almost of a very elongated ellipse, and various observers spoke of it as 'cigar-shaped,' 'like a torpedo,' or a spindle or shuttle."

Like the distinguished German rocket designer, Dr. Walther Riedel, and Dr. Maurice A. Biot, a top U.S. aerodynamicist, Unger is convinced that flying saucers, "cigars," and unexplainable lights in the sky at night are all evidence of visitations from some other world. The objects may not be manned; they may be radio-controlled, pilotless craft rigged up with some other world's notion of television to record what we are up to. Judging by the similarity of the reports since 1597, they may have been watching us a good, long time.