The Origin of the Flying Saucer

On June 24th 1947 Kenneth Arnold of Boise Idaho was flying his own personal airplane over the Washington Cascades. He was looking for a missing marine airplane, hoping for the $10,000 reward posted for its discovery. At 2:50 pm as he was traveling east over the mountains toward Mount Adams, he saw nine large metallic flying objects. These crafts were about twenty-five miles away from his current location in the sky, at an elevation of ten thousand feet, travelin g very, very fast. He noticed that they did not fly in straight lines like ordinary airplanes or make wide turns. Instead they dipped and swerved, following the mountain peaks all the way from Mount Rainier to Mount Adams. Arnold started the stopwatch on his airplane control panel. And calculating based on the distance between the two mountains (45 miles) and the time it took the objects to travel it, he concluded that they were flying at around 1,200 miles an hour. Once the strange crafts vanished in the distan...