:: SUB-ARCHIVE ::
UFOs & Aliens: The Cases That Survive Debunking and Classification
Lights that behave wrong, radar tracks that shouldn’t exist, witnesses who match without meeting. We track sightings, official records, sensor data, and the misinformation layer—separating cultural noise from the incidents that keep returning.
Scope of Inquiry
STATUS: Active
What This Sub-Archive Tracks
This sub-archive tracks UFO/UAP cases as evidence stacks: witness testimony, timelines, radar/visual correlation, flight logs, official statements, and declassified fragments. We separate what’s explainable (astronomy, aircraft, balloons, sensor artifacts) from what remains anomalous after basic checks. The goal isn’t to “prove aliens.” It’s to map which incidents survive scrutiny—and why classification, stigma, and misinformation keep muddying the record.
Classification Categories
Sightings & Encounters
Structured witness cases with tight timelines, location data, and consistency across independent observers.
Official Records
Declassified files, hearings, memos, and program references—often incomplete, but still directional.
The Noise Layer
Misidentifications, hoaxes, sensational media cycles, and disinfo—how the archive gets polluted on purpose.
Reading Protocol
How to Read a UAP Case
- Start with fundamentals: location, sky conditions, flight paths, astronomy, and known platforms.
- Prefer multi-sensor correlation: radar + visual + timing beats a single dramatic story.
- Watch for contamination: media waves and “leaked” narratives can rewrite memories fast.
The most important question isn’t “what is it?” It’s “what survives verification when everyone has an incentive to distort it?”
Case Files
STATUS: Active
3I ATLAS Anomalies: What the Records Show—and Where They Stop
Alien Encounters: What the Records Show—and Where They Stop
Roswell Incident Records: Official Oversight and Documented Gaps
What Is Area 51: Documented Programs and Unresolved Gaps
Alien Abduction Stories: What the Records Show—and Where They Stop
UFO Sightings: What Navy Records Show and Where They Stop

A Living Archive
This project is never complete. History is a fluid signal, often distorted by those who record it. We are constantly updating these files as new information is declassified or discovered.