MORE ROSWELL FRAGMENT INFORMATION
Posted April 21 / April 5, 1996
Source: The Roswell Daily Record.
Jason Bunch-Staff Reporter
"Analysis of metal fails to refute claims of crash". Wherever it
came from, somewhere along the line it fell down and went boom.
Analysis of the piece of metal reportedly linked to the alleged 1947
Roswell UFO crash reveals that the sample was part of a larger object
that did indeed suffer some kind of disaster. "It obviously came from
a larger piece and the way it came from there was from a catastrophic
event," Analyst Chris McKee said. "What that really means, I have no
idea. It could be from an explosion, it could from a crash." The
piece, which was turned into the International UFO Museum and Research
Center March 24 by an anonymous source, was tested last week by McKee
at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro.
Initial results revealed that the sample was composed of silver and
copper, but a written report lists traces of sodium, aluminum,
silicon, iron, chromium, sulfur and chlorine as also present on the
piece.
According to McKee, the origin of those elements is unknown. "It
could just come from handling or soil, we didn't clean the sample or
anything so we have no idea what was on the surface," McKee said Since
the components of the piece are all natural elements, and could be
found throughout the universe, the composition of the metal does not
provide proof one way or another about what crashed in 1947. "It
doesn't really help decide whether it is extraterrestrial or not,"
McKee said. One thing is for sure though, it did not come directly
from the weather balloon experiments known as Project OGUL that the
United States Air Force claim is responsible for the crash.According
to Max Littell of the UFO Museum, Charles Moore, a member of the team
that designed and worked on Project MOGUL, was at the test in Socorro.
"He sa d it was not a part of the balloon, and he worked on the
project before it was even known as MOGUL," Littell said. "It could
have been part of extra instrumentation attached to it, but it wasn't
part of the balloon, nor was it part of its inner-workings." Although
the findings are promising, Littell noted that there is still no
conclusive evidence that what crashed in the desert all those years
ago was a UFO. "There are still a lot of 'could be-s' and 'maybe-s'
but no absolutes in this yet," Littell said. The next step in
verifying the origin of the pi ce is tracking it back to its original
owner. Littell said that the museum is currently working toward that
end.
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