New publications attributed to historical Pentagon archives have revived interest in one of the most enigmatic episodes in the history of unidentified aerial phenomena in the United States. The documents include the transcript of a 1949 meeting held at the Los Alamos laboratory in New Mexico, where military personnel, scientists, and specialists analyzed a series of strange sightings recorded near important facilities linked to the U.S. nuclear program.
According to the released information, the meeting aimed to
evaluate the appearance of mysterious "green fireballs" that, for
several months, had been observed by military personnel, scientists, and other
witnesses in the region. The participants attempted to determine whether it was
a natural phenomenon, foreign technology, or some other explanation.
The collected testimonies described extremely bright,
intensely green objects that moved silently along horizontal trajectories at a
constant speed. These characteristics caught the attention of researchers
because, according to reports from the time, they did not match the usual
behavior of meteors, which typically cross the sky at high speed following
downward trajectories.
The proximity of these sightings to strategic facilities
like Los Alamos, where research related to nuclear weapons was being conducted,
increased the concern of U.S. authorities, who decided to assemble experts in
physics, astronomy, and defense to study the phenomenon.
However, it is important to note that the existence of these
documents does not constitute proof of extraterrestrial origin. The records
reflect that the authorities seriously investigated the sightings due to their
potential impact on national security, but they do not present definitive
conclusions about what the observed objects actually were.
