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TRN - July 1997 - Resolving Arnold - Part 2: Guess Again
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Resolving Arnold - Part 2: Guess Again
by Martin Kottmeyer
One problem that stands out in any attempt to make the Arnold
case a True-UFO is the drawing in the Air Force files. The shape of the object in the top
view is roughly similar to a shoe heel. Not only is it not round as all good flying
saucers ought to be, it is for most practical purposes unique. Only one or two other cases
even come close -- the 1947 Rhodes photo and perhaps the 1993 backdated recollections of
Frank Kaufman concerning Roswell. The distinctiveness calls into question whether it
should be considered part of the UFO phenomenon at all. J. Allen Hynek also offered an
argument which should be addressed here since it is repeated by both critics and
proponents of the case unaware it is partially erroneous. Hynek asserts that the eye
cannot resolve objects that subtend an angle appreciably less than 3 minutes of arc. If we
accept that Arnold was right in saying the objects were 25 miles away and that each
object's length was 20 times its width, then a bit of trigonometry would put their size as
2000 feet in length. This being between a third and a half mile, it is simply too bloody
huge to believe. Such a titan-size fleet would blot out the sun and a fair portion of sky
to people beneath its flight path. How could only one person 25 miles away see this and
everybody closer in miss it?
For those readers who dont know the Arnold story, heres how it first
appeared from the Associated Press:
PENDELTON, Ore., June 25 (AP) -- Nine bright saucer-like objects flying at
"incredible speed" at 10,000 feet altitude were reported here today by Kenneth
Arnold, a Boise, Idaho, pilot who said he could not hazard a guess as to what they were.
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