Visitors Illinois Mufon Journal 3
Visitors Illinois Mufon Journal 3
Visitors Illinois Mufon Journal 3
1
Newsletter
Newsletterof
ofIllinois
IllinoisMUFON
MUFONNFP
NFP
October
August 2008
2008Number
Number23
visitors
is the quarterly newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP, THE DIRECTORS Sam
Incorporated and is solely responsible for its Maranto
content. Illinois MUFONNFP, Inc. is a state
chapter of MUFON, the Mutual UFO Network
VIEW
(an international organization), dedicated to
the scientic investigation of alien visitation.
2
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
UFOS AND
THE NATIONAL DEFENSE
Do UFOs shut down our missiles? What does the government say about alien interference in
our national defense? Is there evidence and who has it? These questions and more will be the
topic of the fourth UFO symposium to be presented November 9th by Illinois MUFON and CUFOS
at the Tinley Park Holiday Inn Convention Center. Join these prominent speakers to learn the
truth about what is kept secret from the public. Robert Hastings, author of UFOs and Nukes
and an independent UFO researcher, will be the key presenter along with Sam Maranto, UFO
researcher and MUFON State Director, will also be conducting an interview of witnesses on
stage. A question and answer period will be open to all attendees after the formal presentations.
Hear them and then decide for yourself!
HASTINGS
Maranto
Go to www.illinoismufon.com to register
$20 per person on the website/$30 at the door
Tinley Park Holiday Inn Convention Center
3
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
I N S I G H T S
I N S I G H T S
Id recommend the Canon Elph Jr. or Canon Elph II plethora of companies and in a great variety of both color
in the APS as good and easily affordable options for a and black & white lm types and speeds, it will remain
pocket, carry-with-you-anywhere-always-ready cam- the standard for the forseeable future. Ill recommend a
era. Ive obtained these from eBay at some staggeringly pocket type, easily carry-with-you-but-NOT-mini cam-
low pricesunder $15.00, including shipping! (one needs eras: the Kodak Retina series of rangender folders. To
to be patient and check out the market for a week or so and briey digress, the rangender camera is NOT an SLR,
pounce when the real deal comes along). so the image through the viewnder is not the exact im-
age the lens sees; the focusing is done by viewing through
two windows at once, the images of which are brought
together by using the focus ring. Of course the simple
thing will be to set these to the innity setting and not
worry about focus, since any shot of UFO activity will al-
most certainly be at a considerable distance. On the other
hand, these cameras offer amazing compactness and ease
Canon Elph II and Canon Elph Jr. of portability compared to their larger SLR brothers and
sisters which require more bulk for the prism and mir-
While the APS format was used mostly for a whole ror innards. They literally fold up into a nice pocket
new generation of minis and point-and-shoot snap- size, easily transported in a mans coat pocket or a la-
shot cameras, both Nikon and Canon explored the Single dies purse. My recommendation from the Kodak Retina
Lens Reex options of multiple lenses and view-through- line of cameras is the Kodak Retina IIa which has one
the-lens-itself that SLRs offer. The Nikon Pronea 6 and very bright lens conguration (get the f2 lens, if possible,
Pronea S and the Canon EOS IX and IX Jr. are excellent- while the f2.8 is also ne). The advantage of this over the
ly made cameras that use a spectrum of Nikon or Canon earlier Retina models is a lm advance lever rather than a
lenses, respectively, including lenses that one might own knob winder (see photos of the Retina IIa and the Retina
for their big brother 35mm Nikon or Canon lm cameras. I below). The king of this line is the Retina IIIC (large C
These cameras offer many more features, but, of course, model preferable to small c model due to the better view-
are not pocket cameras. The original pricing on these nder), which allowed the exchanging of lenses and had
went as high as $700 to $800, but Ive obtained examples both a telephoto option and a wide angle that could be
of eachincluding a lens on the camera and not just the mounted on the camera), but these are still pricey, even
camera bodiesfrom eBay, both at under $50.00, inclu- after all these years, being valued by collectors and old
sive of shipping. Thats pretty amazing for a quality cam- camera buffs, the IIIC bringing $250 to $300 sometimes.
era from a rst-rate company, and its illustrative of the The recommended IIa should be obtainable for under
kinds of deals out there on lm cameras, if one is obser- $50, inclusive of shipping (again, watch for deals and
vant and monitors the market. pounce.)
Canon EOS IX and Nikon Pronea 6i Kodak Retina IIa and Kodak Retina I
Moving on to the ubiquitous 35mm lm format which The 35mm SLRs Id recommend are the various ver-
dates back to 1892! and Thomas Edison working with sions of the Nikon F series which culminated in the stan-
lm supplied by George Eastman, this has been the stan- dard press camera of a couple decades ago: the Nikon F4.
dard camera lm size/guage since 1909! Available from a
5
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
I N S I G H T S
The earlier Fs can be had for under $100 with lens; the on 120 or 220 lm). These cameras are not in any way
F4 (a bulky camera that is excellent for either hand-held automaticone needs to know something about light
or tripod use and has an amazing shutter speed minimum meter reading, f-stop, and lm speed settings to do well
of 1/8000th of a second!) will likely cost anywhere from with one. But, there are a few simple rules that one can
$275 to $500 with lens. follow to make these setting easier:
FOCUS 1: again the simple setting on INFINITY and
leaving it there makes sense for the purpose of any
possible UFO sighting.
FOCUS 2: being a rangender, the documentation of
a UFO site will allow plenty of time for both tripod
mounting and ne-tune focusing (both to insure abso-
lute sharpness of image).
F-STOP: the f-stop is the APERTURE setting of the
Nikon F and Nikon F4
lens. Just as with the metaphor of pipes carrying water,
the larger the pipe, the more water owing over a giv-
Moving on to middle format lm cameras (the 120/220 en timejust so, the wider the lens aperture, the more
roll lm size), there are absolutely amazing deals that can light ows to expose the negative. The SMALLER
be found on this pro-/top-notch amateur type of camera. the f-number, the LARGER the aperture/opening of
Again, the great advantage of these is the enormous nega- the lens, so a setting of f2 allows much more light than
tive size when compared to the 35mm format. Even the one of f16 or f22. The rule of thumb on f-stops is
smaller conguration of 6x4.5 cms is almost three times known as the SUNNY 16 RULE. Its easy to remem-
the exposed negative area of the 35mm, and the larger ber: if the day is bright enough that distinct, sharply-
congurations of 6x6, 6x7, and even 6x9 cms extend this dened shadows are cast, then set the f-stop to f16
to almost six times the exposed negative area. The advan- AND the SHUTTER SPEED to 1 divided by the lm
tages of this are the ability to capture much more detail in speed of the lm being used (or its closest equivalent).
the image AND to be able to enlarge the positive image EXAMPLE: Its a bright, sunny day, and my subject
to nearly mural-size proportions with 8 by 10s being is NOT obscured in the shade (which would require
super-sharp. Again, the middle formats are not necessar- opening up the lens to f11, f8, f5.6, f4, or even f2
ily imperative for every single eld investigator, but ar- in that progression from brightest to deep shadow,
eas or regionsfor example: Illinois MUFONshould intuitively can be done with practice). My camera is
have one available, along with someone who knows how loaded with 200 ASA (lm speed) lm. I set my f-stop
to operate it, for each of its various regions or territories. to f16 (sunny 16 rules) AND my shutter speed to
Ill recommend ve models as all being good options, but 1/250th (the closest to 1/200th that my camera shows,
ranging from the least expensive and most easily porta- with 1/250th being between 1/500th and 1/125th). Of
ble to the most fully automatic. The price range on these course, one could use a LIGHT METER and get pre-
would be from $125 to $500, inclusive of a lens, but those cise settings before shooting, but Sunny 16 works
prices are tiny fractions of original cost (or comparative quite well once you get the hang of it.
original cost, since the rst of these Ill mention go back BRACKET SHOOTING: Whatever your manual set-
to the 1940s when they were state-of-the-art. ting is, its good to bracket the same shot (again, here
One cant go wrong with the workmanship and design were talking site shooting and not UFO-sighting
of the Zeiss Ikon series of folding, rangender middle for- shooting). This means that you would take shots at one
mats. Zeiss is still one of the premier names in German f-stop above and one f-stop below the rst shot AND/
optics, among the best in the world. Ill recommend the OR at the same f-stop but one shutter speed setting
amazingly tiny (not much larger than the Kodak Retina!) above and one below the rst shot (the assumption here
Super Ikonta A. This little wonder takes crystal-sharp 6 is that one of the exposures must be close to correct.
by 4.5 cm negatives (16 per roll of 120 and 32 per roll of
220 lm). Its big brother, the Super Ikonta C takes won- LOW LIGHT/NIGHT SIGHTING SHOOTING: If the
derful 6 by 9 cm negatives (8 and 16 per roll, respectively chance should occur that a sighting of a UFO happened
6
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
I N S I G H T S
when one happened to have a medium format cam- take various lm roll backs in 6x4.5, 6x6, 6x7, or 6x9 cm
era handy, and that incident were at low light or night congurations, and there is a wide variety of lenses from
conditions, the quick settings of FOCUS=INFINITY, extreme wide angle through telephoto that t this camera
F-STOP=MAXIMUM WIDE (say f2 or smaller num- system. Again, a fraction of the original cost, but a full
ber if available), and SHUTTER SPEED=AT LEAST system can still be pricey, up into the $500+ range.
ONE SECOND. Note that this scenario is highly un-
likely, and it might well be better to use a smaller au-
tomatic camera, point-and-shoot, or, certainly, a video
camera if one is also available.
Zeiss Super Ikonta A and Zeiss Super Ikonta C Mamiya Press w/flash
Certainly the best deal on an automatic medium for- Moving on to digital cameras, Ill recommend really
mat camera is the Mamiya 645 Pro TL with AE Prism ANY of the new lines of dependable mini-cameras. The
Finder viewnder and power winder. This camera can be example shown below is the latest Canon Digital Elph,
had on eBay for a very small fraction of its $4000 mini- the SD1000. This digital mini is fully automatic and takes
mum with lens. Ive bought a couple of them over the excellent images for its size. With technology like this
years at $275 to $450 dollars. Its later model in auto-focus available, no individuallet alone no eld investigator
is still very pricey and the 24 megapixel digital back for should be without a reliable camera that captures quality
the auto model is still about $12,000+, but its the cream images.
of automated middle format cameras. As the model num-
ber suggest, it takes ideal format 6 by 4.5 cm negatives.
Its earlier model, the M645 1000s is still a very functional,
hand crank lm advance camera with various viewnder
options, one of them automatic aperture setting. Both of
these are manual focus.
I N S I G H T S
on any camera with a front-threaded lens, simply for the
protection of the actual lens itself. With black and white
lm, the colored lters affect the contrast and tonal quali-
ties of the resultant image. True to life, what-you-see-is-
what-you-get (at least as far as tonal range and contrast)
requires a yellow lter for black and white lm. The ad-
vantages of orange and red are to actually burn through
haze or fog to some degree (they can also produce striking
contrast in art photographyespecially white clouds
against an almost black appearing sky. Green lters help
Canon EOS Digital Rebel SLR
separate the green tones in a forested or multi-green scene
But, if I had to own only one camera, there is no (theyre also used in black and white portraiture to get
doubtbased upon current technologywhich camera pleasing skin tones on modelswouldnt be the same ef-
I would choose. Its compact (although not a mini its fect with color lm.
coat-pocket size); it can work fully automatically as a For the research team or for site eld investigation, a
point-and-shoot, but it also has manual and program- TRIPOD is a necessity. This assures absolute stability for
mable settings; at 12 or 14 megapixels and with a 6x a sharp shot. A MONOPOD can be useful and can be car-
optical zoom, its images are super sharp and easily en- ried fairly easily in terrain where lugging the larger tripod
largeable to poster size; and, in short, its technological might be difcult (although the new carbon-ber tripods
sophistication and image quality are purely amazing. Im are super light as well as super steady [but very pricey]).
referring to either the Canon Powershot G9 or its recently Ive even seen a somewhat shortened walking stick in-
released newer model the G10. Both offer a huge, sharp geniously tted with a screw for camera mounting at the
image viewing/reviewing window and have a hot shoe top (good project for the do-it-yourselfer!). In shooting a
for attaching an external ash for ll ash outdoors or UFO sighting, if one is that fortunate and the cameraof
for indoor shooting (bounce ash to avoid red-eye and courseIS available, try to stabilize the shooting with
shadow, etc.). A college photojournalism instructor and anything handy: leaning against a tree or post, over the
former Pulitzer Prize winning photojournalist friend of roof of a car, anything to stabilize the camera base. A han-
mine just used NOTHING BUT THIS CAMERA on his dy, easy-to-carry-along, support is the beanbagrice or
around-the-country photo pictorial journey over last sum- navy beans in, you guessed it, a stitched up bag! (Some
mer. I cant recommend this highly enough, and, if you are available with synthetic beans/beads in all-weather
shop around, you can get the new G10 for under $400. fabric and foldable in sections for various camera-support
congurations.)
For any manual cameras one might have, a LIGHT
METER is useful (if not absolutely essentialremember
Sunny 16 and other intuitive rules for shooting and
guess-timating light). Still one can be had on eBay for
a fraction of the original costand even the old ones are
often quite accurate and still entirely useable. One dials in
the settings for lm speed and, based upon the light from
the subject, either lm speed or aperture can be gured.
Canon Powershot G9 and Canon Powershot G10 CAMERA BAGS come in all sorts of congurations,
but, perhaps, the larger backpack bags (some with a pouch
That will do it for cameras, but lets briey cover pe-
for a laptop computer as well) make the most sense. If one
ripheral items in the Complete Field Investigators Pho-
has to hump it into difcult country for a site research,
tography Kit.
the great benet of the backpack bag is obvious. But of
For lm cameras of the 35mm or medium format va-
course lots of gear might require multiple bagsback-
riety, it would be optimum to have black & white shooting
packs or more standard congurations, but Ill opt for the
LENS FILTERS in UV/skylight, yellow, orange, red, and
backpack models. Both Lowepro and Tamrac make excel-
green. Actually, a UV or Skylight lter ought to be kept
lent large backpacks (each capable of holding at least two
8
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
I N S I G H T S
cameras and lenses and other gear and the option of lap- whistles photo manipulation software for viewing and
top computer carry as well). Other companies also make working with digital images.
these congurations. Thats all for this installment. In installment three Ill
Other equipment would include a lens/lter cleaning get into the wild and interesting realms of infrared pho-
kit, recharging equipment for digital SLRs and extra bat- tography (both lm and digital) and stereographyusing
teries for any and all cameras in the kit, a small ashlight either a twin lens camera or mounting two cameras side-
(for nding stuff in the dark of course), extra lm and by-side or even using a single camera with one lens to
extra digital media cards, and for site investigation or ex- take 3D images!
tended research, a laptop computer with all the bells and
term homogenization for this practice. vironmentalism, channeling, meditation and alternate
Yet some great names in ufology, researchers like John medication, to create entertaining but weakly substanti-
Keel and Jacques Vallee, relatively early on essayed their ated explanatory webs. These theories frequently conict
own signature comprehensive explanatory theories, quite in major ways with those of other such researchers and
removed from those of the nuts and bolts ET-centered seem to have inherent contradictions as well, which these
mainstream of ufology at the time. Most recent authors charismatic individuals avoid acknowledging or, some-
attempts to nd a unifying explanation, particularly those times even more effectively, do acknowledge as beyond
with some kind of a religious edge to them, seem insuf- our current understanding until we have evolved our
cient to explain the great variety of phenomena associated consciousnesses. There is a long history of such claims
with UFOs. In some instances, a writers rst serious ef- and claimants. Their tales seem especially captivating
fort on the subject incorporates a grand unifying theory to the more intelligent among us, those of us who think
he/she has on the meaning of the whole of ufology, and more than most about ultimate meaning, those of us who
generally it is missing some main thread. recognize that there are, indeed, realms beyond the nar-
I also see this quite often in traditional scholars in oth- row boundaries of material existence, and that material
er elds who attempt to explain ufology from their own existence itself has mysteries currently unfathomed by
narrow academic viewpoint. While supporting the over- modern science.
arching ET hypothesis, the rise of abductions to the fore I suggest we need to be careful and investigate when
in ufology in particularly the 1990s has tended to narrow certain individuals, who may indeed be convinced in their
the discourse. More effort is being spent on the motives own wisdom, bring together a range of separately legiti-
of the abductors apparently involved in human hijackings mate and perhaps some less solid pursuits into an appeal-
than in attempting to understand what, if anything, globes ing explanatory system. Some day one of these people
of light, huge triangles, and structured, domed craft have may indeed get it right, but so far no one has, and the
in common. It is therefore not surprising that many care- history, the odds, compel us to be somewhat discriminat-
ful researchers prefer to focus powerfully upon aspects of ing, and not take everything just on faith. The lack of crit-
the phenomenon, rather than upon grand unied theories ical thinking in this eld does harm to the public percep-
of everything. Thus, while Stanton Friedman may be re- tion and advancement of ufology. My opinions here are
garded as the paradigmatic ufologist, and in many presen- cautious admonitions to us all to beware of extrapolating
tations makes the general case for taking UFOs seriously the data we have to create exciting but under- if not un-
as ET craft, he concentrates on Roswell as a case where supported theories, and also to be careful of swallowing
one of those craft crashed to earth, and MJ-12 as a group whole attractive explanatory schemes that link UFOs to
formed in response to this incident, to manage the situa- a variety of other, particularly paranormal, studies. The
tion of alien visitation. Most of Friedmans work, and the damage done to ufologys struggle for respectful recogni-
work of researchers like Jan Aldrich, Ted Phillips, Rich- tion by credence being granted a dynamic but unscientic
ard Dolan, and many others, is devoted to a portion of the poseur can outweigh the credit for the solid work done by
UFO puzzle, rather than trying to explain everything. several careful researchers.
Ill extend this discussion further: I am wary of the ef-
forts of many popular speakers to tie UFOs in with a pot- Endnotes
Sheaffer, Robert. The UFO Verdict: Examining the Evidence . Buffalo, New York: Pro-
pourri of outside topics to form a Grand Grand Unifying
metheus Books, 1980): 197.
Theory of Everything. Unidentied ying objects and
Swords, Michael. Letter to the Editor: Swords [sic] Caution to Coleman, Journal of
UFO abductions are mixed in with government conspira- Scientific Exploration, vol. 21, No. 1, Spring, 2007: 157. (Lawrence, Kansas: Allen Press).
cies, pop psychology and pop physics, misunderstood Morrison, Phillip, see Thornton on p. 9 of his Foreword to Story, Ronald D., UFOs and
history and Armageddon theories, free energy and en- the Limits of Science, New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1981.
Do you have skills we need? Illinois MUFON is looking for a few dedicated people to
assist us. Professionals of any kind can ll our consultants ranks as well as become a eld
investigator. A person with marketing experience is also needed to ll a board position.
Contact Sam at mufonsam@comcast.com
10
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
(RECORD ATTENDANCE continued from page 1) radio ads running the week previous to the symposium.
civilian personnel with, not unidentied ying objects, A smaller percentage learned of the presentations from
but with ying saucers, alien craft as dened by govern- newspapers and on the internet. With each symposium
ment sources in the documents. the number of attendees has climbed as well as the num-
ber of members joining Illinois MUFON and CUFOS.
Upon review of this symposium, it was assumed that
even more would have attended had the Chicago Air
and Water Show not been running on the same day. Ad-
ditionally, the timing of the symposium was also dur-
ing peak vacation time with many people away from
home who otherwise would have come.
Stanton Friedman and Ted Phillips answering questions from the audience
at the symposium
October 29th JOIN THEM from 7:30 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. for a
delicious buffet dinner for only $22.50 per person
at (kids 712 only $10.50)
11
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
(PATTERNS & CONNECTIONS continued from page 1) a dull silver and just a bit shiny. Once overhead, one went
craft would accommodate my desire to see that happen. left and the other right. Several other people were watch-
Well, none did, never the less, this got me to thinking ing at the time.(1)
about what was going on. Why would a UFO deliberately Lt. Hedison was on communication duty aboard a
(and reports make such activity seem quite deliberate) navy destroyer, about 700 miles out and headed for Bos-
move from the sky to the waters below? As I leaned on ton. The lookout, through the fog, spotted an unidentied
the rail and watched the waves and white caps, I thought green light dead ahead, but radar reported no blip. The
of the various reports Id read of UFOs and water. green light then dropped down to within 30 feet of the
ocean and started to move toward them. The ship turned
Various UFO/water sightings 90 degrees in avoidance, but the light came closer. The
John Carpenter, the American abduction researcher, destroyer turned again, but the light kept pace. As the ship
was watching the night sky to observe the unique starts emerged from the fog, a blip did then show on the radar.
of the Southern Hemisphere and looking out over the Now, the ship turned 180 degrees toward Boston again,
ocean. John and his companions saw a bright object they and the UFO followed this maneuver as well, and it took
assumed was an airplane approaching the local aireld. up station off their port beam. As they watched, the object
The object had extra lights however, and they were not brightened, tilted at an angle, and entered the water with
blinking. One of the party, a former pilot, claimed that the its leading edge. The ships captain, now awake, ordered
object was not an airplane. As they continued to watch, the crew to forget the event, and later repeated the warn-
the object dropped nearer the water, in just a split second. ing two more times.(1)
Then, it hovered above the water before lowering slowly As I started my research, I was surprised to nd a web
into the ocean and out of sight.(1) site devoted to the reporting of UFOs in or around the
Edward was watching a video of a golfer taking les- water. The sightings are numerous and go back quite a
sons near the coast. He noticed something crossing the few years. Clearly, there is more watery strangeness than
screen in less than a second, and curious, he played it back I imagined. But, why would a UFO deliberately enter the
in slow motion. What he water? What are they doing after theyre submerged? Cu-
saw was a at, circular riosity led me to nd out more, as I realized I didnt know
object leaving the sea at much about the oceans of our world.
30 degree angle. He could
see the object shedding A vast, largely unexplored world
water as it emerged.(1) I quickly discovered what a unique resource the oceans
Al was shing off the are. While the space surrounding Earth is quite, well,
pier at Montauk Point. roomy, our land masses are, increasingly, crowded and
He saw a blazing light more than a little populated. With all those eyes, radars,
ash in the sky, then ob- cameras, satellites, telescopes, cell phones, not to mention
served three disk-shaped the Internet, one just cant get away with what was pos-
objects hovering about 20 sible just a few decades ago. If anyone, or anything, had
feet above the ocean. He clandestine plans, the surface of Earth is a dicey place.
watched them spin in tight The oceans, however, are a wonderland of unexplored,
circles for ve minutes, uncrowded space. Just how big are they? Glad you ask.
then they plunged into the water. There was no splash, At the surface, our oceans cover about 70% of the
rather it was as though there was an opening which just globe. They contain roughly 97% of the Earths water sup-
swallowed them up.(1) ply. No other planet in the Solar System has liquid water
Shannon was watching a beautiful sunset from her (but Mars may yet yield some underground supplies). As
yard on Pt. Loma in the fall of 1975. As she took in the you no doubt know, from space, our globe could be called,
view, two objects came straight up out of the sea, side the blue planet. Our ve oceans (we recently added the
by side and dripping water. They surfaced very fast, and Southern Ocean) are all connected to one another, and
went straight up, in formation. Shannon thought she was the water within is always moving, both horizontally, and
seeing the tops of the craft, directly facing her. They were in some cases, vertically. There are also many seas, or
12
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
branches of the oceans, that are often partly enclosed by The lure and mystery of the sea
land. The Mediterranean is a good example.(2)
And the depths? That is even more impressive. Our Ive also learned that humans have always regarded
oceans have a present volume of 8,400,000 cubic miles. the seas as mysterious. From our earliest civilizations,
The greatest ocean depth is found in the Mariana Trench, water has represented a pathway to other places. But,
where the water goes down almost seven miles! The av- who knew what strange creatures lurked in the depths,
erage depth of the oceans, however, is a respectable 2.4 or what bizarre people lived on the other side? Whatever
miles.(2) In other words, if you have the means to get there fears they may have had, evidence is strong that, from
and stay there, our oceans provide a lot of room to hide. our thinking-dawn, we humans have ventured out onto
And, such sanctuary would be (depth and pressure prob- the waters. Those ancient mariners thought it quite pos-
lems aside) problem-free. While a few deep-sea creatures sible they would be attacked by various monsters, fall off
might swim by, the intrusion of humans would hardly be the edge of the world, be caught up in giant whirlpools
a problem. and sucked down into the depths, be lured onto rocky out-
Humans have steadily increased the depths to which crops by sirens, sail on forever and never see home, and
they can descend, but truly deep dives are a fairly rare other cheerless fates. Youve got to admire their spunk!
event. The bathysphere, developed in the 1930s, could Quite apart from the reality of deadly storms and
take two men down 3,028 feet. The bathyscaph or sub- mind-numbing calms, the oceans were thought to harbor
marine balloon, developed by Jacques Piccard and his a variety of creatures far stranger than any land animal.
son, went through several design changes and eventually Some of these we know of todaylarge whales, huge
reached the bottom of the Marianas Trench, near Guam, squids, and Great White sharks. But to our distant ances-
in 1960. The Alvin submersible, operated by the Woods tors, the most feared creature was the sea serpent. You
Hole Oceanographic Institution, routinely makes more have probably noticed them painted on copies of ancient
than 100 dives a year. With modications, it has reached maps, usually out in the middle of an ocean. The serpent
14,764 feet. And, there are also the Russian submersibles, is so pervasive in early mythology that it is near universal.
MIR1 and MIR2, which can work underwater for 17 to For example, it is found in the Bible, in Babylonian cre-
20 hours at a time and reach depths of 19,800 feet.(3) ation stories, and in Norse legends. The serpent is often
pictured as the enemy of God (or the gods) and is called
Leviathan or Rahab in the Bible. He is also referred to as
the, crocked serpent. It is strange how a creature which
is supposed to be imaginary could be found is so many, di-
verse mythsand playing such a strong, evil role in all of
them. As the kids say, Whered that come from? I have
yet to nd references which would indicate ancient sight-
ings of UFOs at sea, but if they exist, Id like to review
them. (I know that Columbus saw some strange light, but
that report is pretty vague.)
13
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
some other function. And, since Im speculating, Ill also doubt that UFOs can and do enter our waters. There are
suggest that the ocean would make a great base of op- just too many eyewitnesses, and they cant all be delu-
eration. After all, we have talked of building cities on the sional or grossly mistaken. Do our governments know
ocean oor, so why wouldnt that work for them? this? Well, when you think about all the military satel-
Id like to close this with a review of perhaps the best lites overhead and the Cold War era detection devices that
documented UFO/water incident we havethe incident at are likely still installed at sea, I dont see how they could
Shag Harbor, Nova Scotia. This is entertainingly presented not know. But, thats a moot point; they wouldnt tell us
by Don Ledger and Chris Styles in their 2001 book, Dark anyway. What do you think UFOs are doing in the briny
Object.(4) It was also covered in a recent History Channel deep?
documentary on USOs. It started on the evening of Oc-
tober 4, 1967, and Styles, who was a Endnotes
1. www.waterufo.net/menu.htm Accessed 5-14-2007.
lad at the time, actually saw the object.
The sighting is impressive for several 2. Earths Oceans. www.enchantedlearningn.com/subjects/ocean/ Accessed 4-12-2007.
reasons, including the number of di- 3. NOVA: Into the Abyss. www.pbs.org/wgbh/navo/frontier/deepsea.html Accessed
4-12-2007.
verse witnesses and the documentation
4. Ledger, Don & Styles, Chris, Dark Object: The Worlds Only Government-Documented
which was ferreted out by the authors. UFO Crash. Dell Publishing, New York, NY. Published 2001.
In summary, a large object (estimated
at 60 feet in diameter), that had been
seen both by ground observers and pi-
lots, crossed the sky in apparent dis-
MUFON 40TH INTERNATIONAL
tress and landed on the water in full view of a number
of witnesses. It was seen oating (vaguely, since it was
SYMPOSIUM CHANGES
now dark) with a single light on its top, but it eventually
sank beneath the surface. Rescue boats found no sign of A month back I received a call from James Carrion, the
MUFON International director, regarding our hosting
the 40th anniversary symposium. It seems there was a
a plane wreck, which is what they expected, but did nd
a strange, yellow foam that smelled of sulfur. They also change of heart on allowing us to host the 40th. This came
observed odd bubbles rising to the surface. as a bit of a surprise and without any prior knowledge or
Since sensitive military installations were nearby, input by our ofcers.
both the Canadian and United States authorities were Concerns were raised regarding our inexperience on
quickly involved. Naturally, neither government shared hosting such an event. This in addition to the fact that we
their ndings, but the book indicates there was a second lack a sizable bank account to assure payment on our half
craft which joined the rst, after that troubled ship had of the bill. Colorado MUFON on the other hand has been
traveled underwater some distance. It would be reason- host to no less than four MUFON International Sympo-
able to assume that repair of the UFO was underway. sia in the past ten years. Both experience and nances are
Some days later, the underwater UFO was seen leaving well in place as a result of such honors. In short, MUFON
the water, with its companion, and ying away. Ledger International isnt going to gamble on Illinois MUFON NFP
and Styles found many witnesses who were willing to after taking it on the chin last year with a shortfall of at-
talk, and, no surprise, the usual gov- tendees and ticket sales. I say this as a matter of factnot
ernment stone wall. Thanks to their begrudgingly.
persistence, some good luck, and a Since it is the decision of MUFON Internationals
few people who shared more than they Board of Directors we graciously wish the best to Denver.
were supposed to, the Shag Harbor We are still planning to have a major event or two next
story is reasonably complete. Good year and are awaiting the date of the Denver symposium
reading! I also just received Ivan T. before planning ours to avoid a conict.
Sandersons Invisible Residents: The For the record, I disagree with their assessment. Mak-
Reality of Underwater UFOswhich ing something work is born of a commitment by a few
Ill be reading soon. dedicated people. Give me a hand full of them and then
I dont think you need to worry next time youre wet- the impossible will become commonplace.
ting a line at the local catsh pond, but there seems little Sam Maranto, President
14
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
THE CAVES OF MARS that sometimes collapses leaving a cave opening. This is
what the exo-geologists think these features on Mars are.
by Guy Richards, MUFON Field Investigator They have also taken thermographs, heat photos, of
guy.richards@sbcglobal.net the caves and as expected for a cave the day cave mouth
temperatures are cooler than the surrounding Mars surface
I n early 2007 Nasa published some photos from the Mars and the night temps are warmer. This is because caves
orbiter that are very interesting. No, theyre not the fa- tend to have a relatively constant temperature versus their
mous Face on Mars or the Cities on Mars that some surface surroundings.
claim to have seen in similar photos after they have mag-
nied them a hundred times. At that magnication you
could see a Martian Empire State building within all the
blur and pixilating.
These new photos are of the northern hemisphere ex-
tinct volcano Olympus Mons. Its a huge feature on Mars
and is the largest known volcano in the solar system.
Chloe: thermograph (last frame) showing temperature hot spot as lightest gray value.
For some months they couldnt tell how deep the caves
were because the sun didnt illuminate the bottom or sides
of the caves. In June 08 the light was just right and they
photographed the side wall of Chloe and estimated the
Mars Olympus Mons volcano is the size of Arizona.
visible depth as over 80 feet. Its likely that Chloe and the
other caves are deeper than this as the light that shows on
On the slopes of Olympus Mons, Nasa has photo- the wall of Chloe does not show any reection to the other
graphed seven caves. They look like round black dots walls or the bottom.
and have been named the seven sisters. So, why are they interesting? Well, theyre interest-
ing because if you are looking for life on Mars, as the
most like Earth planet in the solar system, it would more
likely be found in a warmer protected environment like
a cave than on the exposed surface of Mars. If the tem-
perature at the bottom of the cave was above freezing and
there is water present, as they are nding with the current
Mars Phoenix lander, then the likely hood of nding life
is greater still.
In addition, if you are planning on sending astronauts
to Mars for an extended stay a warm, wet, protected habi-
tat with higher air pressure, such as a deep cave, would
save a lot of weight on the space craft on the way to Mars
and save a lot of time on Mars from not having to build
the habitat. The astronauts couldnt walk around in their
Seven caves on Mars called the seven sisters.
shirt sleeves but at the bottom of a cave you could make a
The most interesting is named Chloe. Chloe is about low pressure shelter from duct tape and a poly tarp.
400 feet across and over 80 feet deep. Nasa is pretty sure OK, OK, I confess Im a hopeless romantic inuenced
that these features are caves because they are associated in my youth by such science ction classics as Poda-
with volcanic activity and a tunneling phenomenon called kayne of Mars by Robert Heinlein, The Caves of Mars
a lava tube. On earth on the slopes of a volcano the and the 1964 movie Robinson Crusoe on Mars.
lava owing down the side of the volcano has an outer Stay tuned, they are looking for signs of CO2, O2 and
skin that cools rst and forms a tube. When the lava stops methane emissions from the caves, all signs that life is
owing or it cools off and shrinks it leaves a hollow tube there.
15
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
NOTICING A DIFFERENCE?
Its not the same old Illinois MUFONchanges are being
JOIN NOW IF YOU...
made! Like improving our website, more meetings, the
realize the benet of being a part of this
new newsletter, and the ongoing series of symposiums
dynamic Midwest UFO organization
offering the best UFO speakers. These are just a few of the would like to support quality UFO research
dynamic plans that are coming. Join Illinois MUFON today and public awareness right here at home
to receive valued discounts on special events, the quarterly Send $20 (check or money order) for a full year
Visitors newsletter, invitation-only documentary viewings, subscription and membership to:
group excursions, and more...all to be announced in the
Illinois MUFONNFP Membership
rst MEMBERS ONLY issue of the Visitors newsletter in P.O. Box 2105, Orland Park, IL 60462
2009. Join today and stay in the know!
16
Newsletter of Illinois MUFONNFP October 2008 Number 3
OCTOBER 08
INCOMING
COMING EVENTS NOVEMBER 08
JUNE 09 By Sam Maranto, President
SEPTEMBER 09