People just aren't reporting UFOs at the rate they used to. Cheryl Costa, co-author with Linda Miller Costa of the important
UFO Sightings Desk Reference: United States of America 2001-2015 should know. Costa speculates seriously and humorously about the reasons for the drop-off. Launching off the Costa article, in
Mysterious Decline in UFO Reports Baffles Observers Brett Tingley has more suggestions for the downward trend. Well, the U.S. report slide since 2014 hasn't been echoed to the north, as
CBCDOCPOV notes in
Canadians Report Seeing UFOs in the Sky at a Rate of 3 Times a Day. This article also concerns a CBC documentary on the exceedingly strange story of Granger Taylor, as well as three of Canada's most perplexing UFO events. On the other hand and to the south the UFO news may seem even bleaker, per
Argentina: Official State Commission (CEFA) Rejects 22 UFO Cases. Argentina's governmental study group has released an 80-page report on their last year's analysis of 22 photographic submissions, with a 100% explanation rate. But scads of significant historical UFO cases remain, according to Martha Jacqueline Iglesias Herrera's interview with Chris Aubeck:
"In Just a Few Years, My Team and I Managed to Create the Largest Archive of Historical Material about UFOs and Fortean Phenomena that had Never Existed." This interview with the co-author (with Martin Shough) of
Return to Magonia: Investigating UFOs in History, published by Anomalist Books, is full of good sense on the subject, and it's a pity that the recent book
Ooparts that Chris Aubeck co-wrote with Juan Jose Sanchez Oro has not been translated from Spanish to English. (WM)
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