10 Most Compelling Pieces Of Evidence That Prove Aliens Have Visited Earth

4. Physical Evidence

Alright so far all we've seen are old works of art, some crazy eye witness reports and a few bizarre stories involving the FBI and the military... That's not much to go on I suppose, so now let's get into some actual physical evidence... Evidence1957 - The Ubatuba UFO Metal Fragments On September 14th, 1957, Ibrahim Sued, a columnist for the Rio de Janeiro newspaper "0 Globo" received an anonymous letter. A man, who chose to remain anonymous, told him what he'd seen, just a few days prior. The letter began with these words: "Dear Mr. Ibrahim Sued(...) I wish to give you something of the highest interest to a newspaperman, about the flying discs..." The letter goes on to state that its author had never been a believer, but that events he'd witnessed had changed his mind. "I was fishing together with some friends, at a place close to the town of Ubatuba, Sao Paulo, when I sighted a flying disc." The letter then describes the disc crashing at lightning speed towards the beach. Impact with water was imminent, but suddenly, inches away from the crash, the ship just reversed its trajectory, it shot up into the air, and exploded. The midday sky is described as "lighting up like fireworks", fragments rained down. Most were lost under water. But a few survived, and the fisherman and his crew had found them. Sued's interest was peaked. He contacted the man and arranged to retrieve the fragments for analysis. On September 24, 1957, Ibrahim Sued took the shards to The Mineral Production Laboratory. It's a division of the National Department of Mineral Production in the Agriculture Ministry of Brazil. The laboratory is the official Brazilian institution for the examination and analysis of mineral substances, metallic ores, metals and alloys. The shards were analysed by the chief chemist of the Spectrographic Section of the Mineral Production Laboratory, Dr. Luisa Maria A. Barbosa. The samples were registered as being "of unknown origin". Barbosa's final analysis report: "The spectrographic analysis identified the unknown metal as magnesium (Mg), and showed it to be absolutely pure as it can be concluded from the study of the spectrographic plate taken with the Hilger Spectrograph. No other metal or impurity was detected in the sample analysed; even the so called "trace elements," usually found with any metal, were not present." X ray spectrometry and X ray diffractometry both confirmed the previous report. Also, and this is strictly for the uber geek, the magnesium's density was off. Off in the sense that no known magnesium should have this density at this level of purity. Under these exact circumstances the magnesium's relative density should have been 1.741, but a significantly higher density was found. The carefully measured density of this magnesium sample was 1.866. The procedure was repeated three times with a microbalance, and the same value was found each time. So in conclusion: the metal was too pure too be natural and too dense to be human. We didn't make it, we couldn't have made it and we can't yet see why nature would have... Splitting hairs? Maybe... Okay, try this next one. 1965 Cherry Creek, New York August 19th, 1965, William Butcher, 16-years-old, is out in the dairy barn having a good ol' time, milking some cows, listening to the radio. It's about 8:20pm. The milking machine is powered by tractor (don't ask). And the radio is playing a news broadcast along with occasional music. Suddenly, radio static, the tractor engine shuts down. A Holstein bull begins acting up, pulling at a chain attached to a steel railing he's tied up to. The bull along with some cows jumps, kicks and bucks, they make all kinds of "ungodly" noises. William runs to the window to see what the commotion is about. What he sees is an oval shaped UFO about 1/4 mile away from the barn. The object is about 50ft long and 20ft thick. A red mist emanates from the craft, which suddenly shoots up into the clouds above. William calls his family out. They run outside to witness what's happening. There's a strange odour outside and up in the sky, the clouds glow a strange green. The police are called in to investigate. The next day Captain James Dorsey, Operations Officer, 4621st AF Group, arrives at the scene, bringing with him four technicians. They discover a strange, purple liquid in several places along the ground. The grass is singed, and unexplained marks, two inches wide and two inches apart, are found beneath the exact spot the craft was hovering. The purple liquid was analysed by the Kawecki Chemical Company. The company president had this to say: "Spectrographic analysis showed the main elements of the liquid to be aluminium, iron and silicon. Some phosphorous was found in the weed samples, which the analyst said might cause a phosphate smell, explaining the odour." The next day State Trooper Richard Ward sees an unknown object with 8 circular lights flying twice as fast as a jet. The object emits a faint sound... The National Investigations Committee on Areal Phenomena stated in a subsequent report that they believed the incident to be genuine. It has been labeled as a "True Unknown". The electromagnetic disturbances that effected the radio and the tractor have yet to be explained. The Air Force came in, taping the area off, the military confiscated all photos and other evidence the family acquired. William Butcher was told by military officers that if any subsequent photos or evidence were to be released in the future, he would be arrested and either placed in jail or an asylum. The Cherry Creek incident is one of over 600 cases investigated by the air force between 1948 and 1969. Case files released under the freedom of information act have most pertinent information, like names, dates and addresses, completely blacked out. The Falcon Lake Encounter of 1967 On May 20, 1967, Stefan Michalak was in The Whiteshell Provincial Park in Manitoba, Canada, prospecting for silver. It was a hobby of his. At around 12pm he was startled by the sound of geese flying away. He looked up and was shocked to see two elongated objects descending toward the ground. They were glowing a reddish colour. The closer they got, the more their shape became clear, they were disc-shaped. One of the UFOs hovered in mid-air while the other made a landing about 150ft away from him. The craft emitted purple lights and a strange smell, like sulfur. For a half hour Michalak stood before the craft making a detailed sketch to the best of his ability. Suddenly an opening appeared in the aircraft. Being the curious guy he is, he felt he had no choice. He moved in for a closer look. From just outside the door, he could see inside the craft. There were panels of different coloured lights, and light beams crossing each other "like security laser beams in movies". The panel array was similar to a display on a computer. He could not see any living beings in the craft, and decided to walk back. To distance himself from the UFO. But then, he had to get a better look at the material. He examined the exterior of the craft. He describes it as "highly polished coloured glass with no breaks or seams in its surface." When he put his hand on it, his glove was melted by the heat. A vent in the craft opened up and a blast of heat shot out as the UFO rose off the ground and took to the skies. Michalak's shirt and undershirt caught fire. The craft flew away. Michalak tore his clothes off and stomped them out. Soon after, he suffered from a bad headache and nausea. He broke into a cold sweat, vomited and made his way to the hospital. He showed signs of hair loss and a series of raised oval-shaped sores on his chest and abdomen in a grid-like pattern. The soars were treated as first-degree burns. On July 28, Michalak and a few RCMP officers found a semicircle on the rock face at the scene, 15 feet in diameter, where the moss had been somehow removed. There were traces of radiation in a fault in the rock across the centre of the landing spot. No trace of radiation was found around the outer perimeter of the circle or in the moss or grass below the raised portion of the rock. Dr. Horace Dudley, a radiologist and APRO advisor at the University of Southern Mississippi, observed that Michalak's: ". . . nausea and vomiting followed by diarrhoea and loss of weight is a classical picture of severe whole body radiation with x- or gamma rays. I would guess that Mr. Michalak received on the order of 100-200 roentgens." Strange metal was also found at the site, silver of improbable purity... In the days following Michalak's report, several dozen other witnesses came forward claiming they had seen a similar object in the air, in the surrounding areas on that same day.
 
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Contributor

Unpublished author, unproduced screenwriter, un-enacted playwright & director for higher (currently waiting by the phone), Guillaume Parisien sometimes writes puff pieces for the pop-culture indulgent in order to support his vices; of which there are many.