Nous sommes actuellement le 02 Mai 2025, 21:37

Le fuseau horaire est réglé sur UTC+1 heure




Publier un nouveau sujet Répondre au sujet  [ 3 messages ] 
Auteur Message
 Sujet du message: Des OVNI au Far West ?
MessagePublié: 07 Août 2011, 09:54 
Grand matou
Grand matou
Avatar de l’utilisateur
Hors-ligne

Inscription: 29 Juillet 2008, 20:26
Messages: 6447
Lu sur MSNBC :

Citer:
UFO sightings in Wild West? Well, pilgrim...
One 'Cowboys and Aliens' report was the talk of the town in Dallas in 1897

The new film "Cowboys and Aliens," starring Harrison "Indiana Jones" Ford and Daniel "James Bond" Craig, opens today and is likely to snatch the top spot at the box office this weekend. The anachronistic sci-fi thriller tells the story of extraterrestrials who attack a small New Mexico town in search of — well, I won't give away any spoilers.

Cowboys and aliens? Why not? Many people believe that alien contact is nothing new, and that Earth has been visited for millennia. Some, such as best-selling Swiss author Erich von Däniken, have suggested (based on flawed evidence and logic) that aliens built the pyramids in Egypt. Others believe that the giant drawings in the Nazca desert of Peru, in South America, were created by (or for) extraterrestrials in space ships. In fact, there's good evidence that the Nazca Lines were created by the Nazca Indians, probably as part of ceremonial rituals.

But what about sightings and reports of aliens in the Old West? Surprisingly, there actually are a few reports of extraterrestrial encounters in the 1800s. In those days folks didn't use terms like "UFO" or "flying saucer" (that phrase didn't appear until 1947), but instead referred to spacecraft as "airships."

By far the most detailed (and most dramatic) encounter between cowboys and aliens occurred in 1897 Texas. This account ran in the April 19 Dallas Morning News: "About 6 o'clock this morning the early risers of Aurora (Texas) were astonished at the sudden appearance of the airship which has been sailing throughout the country. It was traveling due north and sailed over the public square and when it reached the northern part of town it collided with the tower of Judge Proctor's windmill and went to pieces with a terrific explosion, scattering debris over several acres of ground."

This is remarkable enough, but the account takes on an even more modern twist: "The pilot of the ship is supposed to have been the only one aboard, and while his remains were disfigured, enough of the original has been picked up to show that he was not an inhabitant of this world. Mr. T.J. Weems (of) the U.S. Army ... gives his opinion that the pilot was a native of the planet Mars. Papers found on his person — evidently the records of his travels — are written in some unknown hieroglyphics, and cannot be deciphered. ... The ship was built of an unknown metal, resembling somewhat a mixture of aluminum and silver, and must have weighed several tons. The town today is full of people who are viewing the wreckage and gathering specimens of strange metal from the debris."

This amazing UFO encounter, complete with a crashed spacecraft, dozens of witnesses, a recovered dead Martian and metallic wreckage came not from a novelist but instead a credible witness and respected reporter for the newspaper, a Mr. E.E. Haydon. Fifty years later, a nearly identical story would circulate about another, very similar UFO crash in a neighboring state: Roswell, N.M.

The late UFO investigator Phil Klass researched this encounter between cowboys and aliens for his book “UFOs Explained." The accounts by witnesses fell apart under close scrutiny. No follow-up newspaper stories appeared about this amazing incident; no witnesses could be found to support Haydon's story, and nothing of the alien nor his "several tons" of mysterious metallic spacecraft wreckage was ever found. Plus, it was later revealed that Judge Proctor didn't even have a windmill for the alien to crash into! It turned out that Haydon had made the whole thing up as a publicity stunt to get people to come to the dying Texas town. Once a lively and bustling frontier town frequented by prospectors on their way to the Gold Rush, Aurora had fallen on hard times and needed a tourism boost.

It was a cracking good yarn while it lasted. Stories of cowboys and aliens have entertained us for well over a century, though hard evidence of extraterrestrials remains as elusive as ever.

_________________
:binocle: Sage à ses heures, idiot le reste du temps.
Horaire inconnu.


Haut
 Profil  
Répondre en citant  
 Sujet du message: Re: Des OVNI au Far West ?
MessagePublié: 07 Août 2011, 17:50 
Sonne toujours deux fois
Sonne toujours deux fois
Avatar de l’utilisateur
Hors-ligne

Inscription: 05 Août 2008, 17:27
Messages: 7436
Localisation: Massif central. Par là.
Je suis très surpris :

- que cette histoire n'ait pas fait plus de bruit, tant du côté des convaincus (puisqu'il démontrerait que les « crash de soucoupes volantes » ne sont pas apparus avec Roswell et seraient une pièce en plus à ajouter aux théories de la présence passé de vaisseaux extraterrestres) que des sceptiques (puisque le témoignage éclaire d'un jour nouveau l'affaire Roswell et tout le folklore actuel autour des crash de vaisseaux extraterrestres) ;

- du contenu très moderne de ce « témoignage ». Le vaisseau qui s'écrase, le cadavre du pilote extraterrestre retrouvé, les hiéroglyphes sur les morceaux de l'épave... Non seulement cela ressemble suspicieusement à l'affaire Roswell ; mais à ma connaissance, c'est seulement au début du XXème siècle (avec H. G. Wells notamment) que ce type d'histoires d'extraterrestres allaient apparaître et réellement devenir populaires auprès du public.

_________________
Close the world, open the next


Haut
 Profil  
Répondre en citant  
 Sujet du message: Re: Des OVNI au Far West ?
MessagePublié: 07 Août 2011, 19:09 
Ornithorynque consterné
Ornithorynque consterné
Avatar de l’utilisateur
Hors-ligne

Inscription: 16 Mai 2010, 16:44
Messages: 1266
Localisation: Dans une rivière australienne
Pour une histoire censée être aussi vieille, la piste de la légende urbaine n'est pas à écarter, en effet.


Haut
 Profil  
Répondre en citant  
Afficher les messages publiés depuis:  Trier par  
Publier un nouveau sujet Répondre au sujet  [ 3 messages ] 

Le fuseau horaire est réglé sur UTC+1 heure


Qui est en ligne ?

Utilisateurs parcourant ce forum : Aucun utilisateur inscrit et 5 invités


Vous ne pouvez pas publier de nouveaux sujets dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas répondre aux sujets dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas éditer vos messages dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas supprimer vos messages dans ce forum
Vous ne pouvez pas transférer de pièces jointes dans ce forum

Rechercher:
Atteindre:  
Développé par phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Group
Traduction française officielle © Maël Soucaze