Mystery Atlas
Primary Source

US Air Force Roswell Reports (1994–1997)

Two official US Air Force reports — 'The Roswell Report: Fact versus Fiction in the New Mexico Desert' (1995) and 'Case Closed' (1997) — identifying the debris as Project Mogul material and 'alien body' accounts as conflated memories of test dummies and accidents.

This is a knowledge-graph entry: what our data records about US Air Force Roswell Reports (1994–1997) and how it connects to the rest of the atlas. It does not have a full article of its own yet.

Connected to

How this topic links to the people, places, and ideas around it — drawn from our knowledge graph.

Theories & Explanations

  • US Air Force Roswell Reports (1994–1997) criticised Roswell Extraterrestrial Crash Theory — The reports attribute the claimed alien bodies to conflated memories of anthropomorphic test dummies and aircraft accidents.

  • Roswell Balloon Explanationformalised 1994–1997

    US Air Force Roswell Reports (1994–1997) supports Roswell Balloon Explanation.

Organisations & Programmes

The Roswell Incident: From Debris to Legend

How a 1947 balloon recovery became the best-known UFO conspiracy theory — the same beats are reusable on the Roswell, Project Mogul, Area 51, and UFO-history pages.

  1. 24 June 1947

    Kenneth Arnold Sighting

    The sighting wave that primed the press for 'flying disc' stories.

  2. 4 June 1947

    Project Mogul flight 4 launched from Alamogordo

    The classified balloon train later identified as the source of the debris.

  3. 8 July 1947

    RAAF press release announces a recovered 'flying disc'

    The Roswell Army Air Field statement that created the story.

  4. 9 July 1947

    Military correction: a weather balloon

    General Ramey's press conference re-describes the debris; the story goes dormant for three decades.

  5. 1978

    Jesse Marcel interview revives the case

    The intelligence officer's recollections to researcher Stanton Friedman restart public interest.

  6. 1980

    The Roswell Incident (1980)

    The first book-length treatment assembles the modern extraterrestrial-crash narrative.

  7. 1984

    Majestic 12 Documents

    Alleged briefing papers surface; later assessed as fabricated.

  8. 1994

    US Air Force Roswell Reports (1994–1997)

    Official reports identify Project Mogul and close the case for the Air Force.

  9. 1997

    'Case Closed' report and the 50th anniversary

    The second USAF report lands amid anniversary coverage; belief in the crash narrative persists in polling.

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