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Why Alabama belongs in US UFO history
For a state-level UFO page, Alabama is not merely a place with scattered night-light reports. It has a direct connection to the official US UFO era. Project Blue Book, the Air Force’s long-running UFO investigation, handled reports from 1947 to 1969; the Air Force says it received 12,618 sightings in total, of which 701 remained “unidentified”. The same official summary says Blue Book found no evidence that evaluated UFOs were a national-security threat, no evidence that the unidentified cases represented technology beyond modern science, and no evidence that they were extraterrestrial vehicles. [Air Force]af.milUnidentified Flying Objects and Air Force Project Blue Book > Air Force > Fact Sheet Display…
Alabama also enters the archive story directly. When Project Blue Book was terminated in December 1969, the Defence Department’s release said the records would be retired to the USAF Archives at Maxwell Air Force Base in Alabama. A later National Archives accession document located the records at the Albert F. Simpson Historical Research Center, Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base, Montgomery, before their transfer into the National Archives system. [Defense Logistics Agency]esd.whs.milDefense Logistics Agency
That archival connection matters because it separates Alabama’s UFO history from pure folklore. Some claims about the state can be checked against official files, microfilm, local reporting, and later sceptical analysis. The National Archives now states that Project Blue Book records are declassified and available for examination, while also noting that the project closed in 1969 and the Archives has no information on sightings after that date. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukbriefing guide 12 07 12briefing guide 12 07 12
The Chiles-Whitted encounter: Alabama’s landmark case
The strongest-known Alabama UFO case is the Chiles-Whitted encounter of 24 July 1948. Captain Clarence S. Chiles and co-pilot John B. Whitted were flying an Eastern Air Lines DC-3 from Houston to Atlanta when, according to Edward J. Ruppelt’s later account, Chiles saw a fast-closing light about 20 miles south-west of Montgomery at around 2:45 a.m. The object was described as passing close to the aircraft and then climbing away. [Wikisource]en.wikisource.orgThe Report on Unidentified Flying Objects/Chapter 3The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects/Chapter 3
The case became important for three reasons. First, the witnesses were professional airline pilots rather than casual observers. Secondly, the reported object was not just a distant light; it was described as a structured, elongated craft with illumination that witnesses likened to windows or ports. Thirdly, the case landed during the early Project Sign period, when the Air Force was still trying to decide whether flying-saucer reports were misidentifications, enemy technology, psychological contagion, or something more puzzling. NICAP’s case directory, drawing on Ruppelt and later UFO researchers, summarises the report as a 5–10 second aircraft sighting near Montgomery with two observers, no radar contact, and no electromagnetic interference. [NICAP]nicap.orgUFO ReportUFO Report
The doubts are just as important as the claim. Later analysis has argued that the pilots may have seen a bright fireball or fragmenting bolide, a meteor bright enough to give a misleading impression of shape, speed and structure. Martin Shough’s technical review for NICAP does not make the meteor explanation effortless; it notes timing problems, witness discrepancies, and the difficulty of fitting all related reports into one neat track. But it also shows why a high-altitude fireball remains a serious explanation: several broadly similar reports occurred along a rough corridor from Virginia to Alabama, some descriptions were “fireball-type”, and apparent “windows” can arise when a fragmenting object is seen under startling conditions. [NICAP]nicap.org480724montgomery shough480724montgomery shough
The case therefore sits in the unresolved-but-not-untouchable category. It is not a confirmed craft, and the meteor explanation cannot be dismissed simply because the witnesses were pilots. Yet it is also not a trivial sighting: the short duration, professional witnesses, early official attention and disagreement over interpretation make it one of Alabama’s most historically consequential UFO reports.
Project Blue Book in Alabama: records, cases and limits
Project Blue Book gives Alabama UFO history a paper trail, but not a simple answer. The state appears in case files and in later archival custody, yet Blue Book’s own conclusions were cautious and often sceptical. The official Air Force position was that none of its evaluated UFO reports proved an extraterrestrial vehicle, a national-security threat, or technology outside known science. [Air Force]af.milUnidentified Flying Objects and Air Force Project Blue Book > Air Force > Fact Sheet Display…
Alabama case material shows both the value and the frustration of the archive. A 1966 Mobile, Alabama Blue Book file, for example, includes a witness drawing and description of a polished object said to have hovered for five minutes, moved in straight-line manoeuvres, made a faint humming noise, and departed north. The file also contains Blue Book correspondence saying the information received was not sufficient for evaluation and asking the witness to complete an Air Force form. [Wikimedia Commons]commons.wikimedia.orgFile:Project GRUDGE Report 1949File:Project GRUDGE Report 1949
That is a useful lesson for readers. A case can look dramatic in a witness sketch and still be weak as evidence if investigators lack independent confirmation, instrument data, multiple reliable viewpoints, or a way to rule out aircraft, balloons, astronomical objects, hoaxes or perceptual error. In Blue Book files, “unidentified” often means “not enough reliable data to identify”, not “confirmed extraordinary technology”.
Alabama also had aviation and military settings that made UFO reports culturally plausible. Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery, Brookley Air Force Base in Mobile, Redstone Arsenal, and NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville gave the state a strong aerospace and defence identity. NASA describes Marshall, in Huntsville, as a centre that has delivered propulsion systems, launch vehicles and space systems for more than six decades; Air University is headquartered at Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery. [NASA]nasa.govOpen source on nasa.gov.
Those connections do not prove unusual sightings were secret aircraft or alien craft. They do explain why Alabama residents often interpret unusual lights through aviation, spaceflight and military frames, especially around Huntsville, Mobile and Montgomery.
Fyffe: the UFO flap that became local identity
The best-known Alabama “flap” after the classic Air Force era is Fyffe, a small town in DeKalb County on Sand Mountain. Alabama Public Radio reports that on 11 and 12 February 1989, roughly 50 residents saw what they believed was a banana-shaped UFO, and that residents contacted organisations including Birmingham and Huntsville airports, Marshall Space Flight Center, Maxwell Air Force Base and the National Weather Service. The sightings reportedly returned in the early 1990s. [Alabama Public Radio]apr.orgSource details in endnotes.
Local television reporting has preserved a slightly different date emphasis, saying that on 17 February 1989 a rash of UFO sightings was reported to police in Fyffe. Former Fyffe police officer Fred Works recalled seeing a large, silent object with red and white lights, adding that its lack of sound was the mysterious part for him. WAFF also notes that the episode helped give Fyffe the identity of Alabama’s “official UFO capital”. https [www.waff.com]waff.comSource details in endnotes.
Fyffe is important because it shows how a UFO report can become civic folklore without being resolved as a scientific case. The town’s UFO Days festival later reworked “UFO” into “Unforgettable Family Outing”, with live music, arts and crafts and hot-air balloons. The Encyclopedia of Alabama describes the festival as originating in the alleged 1989 mass sighting. [Encyclopedia of Alabama]encyclopediaofalabama.orgEncyclopedia of Alabama FyffeEncyclopedia of Alabama Fyffe
The evidence is stronger as social history than as proof of an extraordinary object. The number of witnesses and involvement of police give the story weight. The lack of a clear photographic, radar or official investigative resolution leaves the physical claim open. For readers, Fyffe is best understood as a genuine local sighting cluster whose meaning now lies partly in what people reported seeing and partly in how the town chose to remember it.
Falkville’s “Metal Man”: memorable, photographic and highly doubtful
Falkville’s 1973 “Metal Man” is one of Alabama’s strangest UFO-adjacent stories. The basic account is that Police Chief Jeff Greenhaw received an anonymous call about a UFO or strange figure, went to investigate, and photographed a shiny humanoid figure. The Cullman Tribune’s local retrospective describes Greenhaw as a young Falkville police chief who received a frantic call about a UFO in a field outside town. [The Cullman Tribune]cullmantribune.comThe Cullman Tribune Do you believe in the Metal Man?The Cullman Tribune Do you believe in the Metal Man?
The case remains popular because it has photographs, a named law-enforcement witness and a bizarre visual hook: a reflective figure that looks, in many reproductions, more like a person wrapped in foil than a conventional “grey alien”. That same quality is why scepticism is unavoidable. The story lacks robust corroboration, depends heavily on one witness, and has long attracted hoax explanations. Even sympathetic retellings tend to acknowledge the possibility that Greenhaw was pranked or that the episode damaged his reputation more than it established a reliable UFO case.
Falkville belongs on an Alabama UFO page because it is culturally durable, not because it is evidentially strong. It is a good example of a case that is vivid enough to survive for decades while remaining too thinly supported to treat as anything more than disputed folklore.
Modern reporting patterns: Huntsville, Birmingham and Mobile
Recent self-reported UFO data suggests Alabama’s largest sighting clusters follow population, aviation activity and cultural attention. Stacker, using National UFO Reporting Center data from reports dating back to 1995, ranked Huntsville first among Alabama cities with 91 reports, followed by Birmingham with 85 and Mobile with 71; Montgomery, Dothan, Madison, Gulf Shores, Tuscaloosa, Florence and Hoover also appeared in the top ten. [Stacker]stacker.comCities With the Most UFO Sightings in Alabama | StackerCities With the Most UFO Sightings in Alabama | Stacker
These numbers should be handled carefully. NUFORC-style reports are useful for spotting patterns and locating witness narratives, but they are not the same as confirmed incidents. A city may rank high because it has more people, more sky-watchers, more aviation traffic, more military or space-industry attention, or simply more residents who know where to file a report. Huntsville’s position is unsurprising given its “Rocket City” identity and the presence of Marshall Space Flight Center and Redstone Arsenal, but that context is a reason to investigate reports carefully, not a reason to assume an exotic cause. [NASA]science.nasa.govOpen source on nasa.gov.
For readers trying to judge modern Alabama sightings, the useful question is not “Which city has the most UFOs?” but “Which reports have enough information to test?” A useful report gives time, direction, duration, weather, aircraft activity, satellite possibilities, multiple independent witnesses, images or video with metadata, and preferably radar or sensor confirmation. Most public reports do not meet that bar.
Common explanations in Alabama cases
Alabama UFO reports tend to fall into the same explanatory buckets seen elsewhere, but the state’s geography and aerospace culture give some explanations extra force.
Bright meteors and fireballs are especially relevant to the Chiles-Whitted debate. A fireball can appear startlingly close, structured and fast, particularly when seen suddenly at night from an aircraft. Shough’s Chiles-Whitted analysis shows how even trained observers can face timing and distance uncertainties when a bright, fast event is glimpsed for only seconds. [NICAP]nicap.orgExtraterrestrial PsychologyExtraterrestrial Psychology
Aircraft, helicopters and military activity are also recurring possibilities. Alabama has long had major aviation and defence sites, including Maxwell, Brookley, Redstone and Marshall-related aerospace activity. That does not reduce every sighting to a plane, but it does mean that witness reports near these areas need careful checks against flight paths, training activity, approach corridors, drones, flares and experimental or classified operations. [Mobile Airport Authority]mobileairportauthority.comSource details in endnotes.
Balloons, satellites and sky lanterns matter more in modern reports than in early Blue Book files. The shift from rare official paperwork to easy online reporting means more low-information cases enter public databases. AARO’s public case pages show a broader modern pattern in which some UAP imagery has been resolved as balloons, while other cases remain under analysis or unresolved due to limited data. [AARO]aaro.milOpen source on aaro.mil.
Weather and optical effects should not be ignored. NASA’s UAP study stresses that the subject needs a rigorous, evidence-based approach and better data acquisition; its report also illustrates how unusual atmospheric phenomena, such as red sprites, can look extraordinary while still being natural. [NASA Science]science.nasa.govSource details in endnotes.
What later official UAP work changes — and what it does not
Modern UAP language has made the subject more respectable, but it has not retroactively proven Alabama’s old cases. NASA’s 2023 independent study framed UAP as a scientific data problem: some observations are not immediately identifiable, but progress depends on better sensors, better reporting standards and rigorous analysis rather than assumption. [NASA Science]science.nasa.govSource details in endnotes.
The Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office, or AARO, has taken a similarly cautious line in its historical review. Its 2024 report says Project Blue Book recorded 12,618 UFO sightings between 1947 and 1969 and that J. Allen Hynek served as lead scientific investigator. It also states that reviewed investigations did not reach the conclusion that UAP reports indicated extraterrestrial origin, while acknowledging that many cases remain unresolved because the data are not good enough to support a firm identification. [U.S. Department of War]media.defense.govU.S. Department of War AARO Historical Record Report Volume 1U.S. Department of War AARO Historical Record Report Volume 1(#endnote-14 “Endnote 14”)
For Alabama, this means the right conclusion is modest. The state has cases worth studying, especially Chiles-Whitted and Fyffe. It has official records and aerospace settings that give the topic real historical texture. But the strongest current institutional position remains that unresolved is not the same as extraterrestrial, and that many reports can be explained only when investigators have enough detail to test ordinary causes.
How to read Alabama UFO stories responsibly
Alabama’s UFO history is most useful when divided into three evidence levels.
Historically significant cases include Chiles-Whitted because it involved professional pilots, entered early Air Force UFO thinking, and remains debated in serious UFO literature. Its weakness is not lack of importance, but uncertainty over whether the object was a structured craft or a misperceived fireball. [Wikisource]en.wikisource.orgChapter 10Chapter 10
Local flap and folklore cases include Fyffe, where many residents and police-linked witnesses reported unusual objects in 1989, and where the story became part of civic identity. The witness cluster is notable, but the physical evidence remains too limited for a firm conclusion. [Alabama Public Radio]apr.orgSource details in endnotes.
Weak or disputed curiosities include Falkville’s “Metal Man”, which is memorable and culturally sticky but depends on fragile evidence and is widely vulnerable to hoax or prank interpretations. It is worth mentioning because people still ask about it, not because it proves a visitation. [The Cullman Tribune]cullmantribune.comThe Cullman Tribune Do you believe in the Metal Man?The Cullman Tribune Do you believe in the Metal Man?
The strongest takeaway is that Alabama’s UFO record is not empty, but it is uneven. It contains one nationally important aviation case, a distinctive local flap, an archival connection through Maxwell, and a modern pattern of self-reported sightings concentrated around major cities. The evidence supports continued curiosity and careful archival reading; it does not support certainty that Alabama has hosted extraterrestrial craft.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to What Are Alabama's Most Significant UFO Incidents?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
The Hynek UFO Report
Directly connects to official UFO investigations that frame Alabama's major cases.
The UFO Experience
Explains witness reports, investigations, and the scientific debate surrounding UFO sightings.
The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects
Provides historical context for the Air Force investigations discussed throughout Alabama UFO history.
UFOs
Focuses on credible witnesses such as pilots, matching Alabama's most famous cases.
Endnotes
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Source: en.wikisource.org
Title: The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects/Chapter 3
Link: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Report_on_Unidentified_Flying_Objects/Chapter_3 -
Source: esd.whs.mil
Title: Defense Logistics Agency
Link: https://www.esd.whs.mil/Portals/54/Documents/FOID/Reading%20Room/UFOsandUAPs/asdpa1.pdf?ver=2017-05-22-113454-807 -
Source: af.mil
Title: Air Force
Link: https://www.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Sheets/Display/Article/104590/unidentified-flying-objects-and-air-force-project-blue-book/Source snippet
Unidentified Flying Objects and Air Force Project Blue Book > Air Force > Fact Sheet Display...
-
Source: prologue.blogs.archives.gov
Title: Pieces of History
Link: https://prologue.blogs.archives.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/9/2018/03/report.pdf -
Source: archives.gov
Title: National Archives Project BLUE BOOK
Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/military/air-force/ufos -
Source: nicap.org
Title: UFO Report
Link: https://www.nicap.org/480724chiles_dir.htm -
Source: nicap.org
Title: 480724montgomery shough
Link: https://www.nicap.org/reports/480724montgomery_shough.pdf -
Source: upload.wikimedia.org
Title: Project Blue Book report 1966 10 8283429 Mobile Alabama
Link: [https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/Project_Blue_Book_report_-1966-10-8283429-Mobile-Alabama.pdf](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/Project_Blue_Book_report-_1966-10-8283429-Mobile-Alabama.pdf) -
Source: nasa.gov
Link: https://www.nasa.gov/marshall/ -
Source: waff.com
Link: https://www.waff.com/2018/08/23/fyffe-prepares-ufo-days-festival/ -
Source: stacker.com
Title: Cities With the Most UFO Sightings in Alabama | Stacker
Link: https://stacker.com/stories/alabama/cities-most-ufo-sightings-alabama -
Source: aaro.mil
Link: https://www.aaro.mil/UAP-Cases/Official-UAP-Imagery/ -
Source: science.nasa.gov
Link: https://science.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/uap-independent-study-team-final-report.pdf -
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Title: U.S. Department of War AARO Historical Record Report Volume 1
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Source: nicap.org
Title: Extraterrestrial Psychology
Link: https://www.nicap.org/ncp/ncp-hall2.htm -
Source: archive.org
Title: 1948 07 9670642 20Mi SofMontgomery Ala 144
Link: https://archive.org/details/1948-07-9670642-20Mi-SofMontgomery-Ala–144- -
Source: archive.org
Title: 1959 10 6960346 Mobile Alabama
Link: https://archive.org/details/1959-10-6960346-Mobile-Alabama -
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Title: David Jacobs The UFO Controversy In America
Link: https://ia803206.us.archive.org/26/items/DavidJacobsTheUFOControversyInAmerica/David%20Jacobs%20-%20The%20UFO%20Controversy%20In%20America.pdf -
Source: archive.org
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Title: Edward J Ruppelt The Report on Unidentified Flying Objects
Link: https://ia800501.us.archive.org/20/items/FritjofCapraTheTurningPoint/Edward%20J%20Ruppelt%20-%20The%20Report%20on%20Unidentified%20Flying%20Objects.pdf -
Source: ntrs.nasa.gov
Link: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/19940015013/downloads/19940015013.pdf -
Source: science.nasa.gov
Link: https://science.nasa.gov/uap/ -
Source: science.nasa.gov
Link: https://science.nasa.gov/uap/faqs/ -
Source: nasa.gov
Title: nasa to release discuss unidentified anomalous phenomena report
Link: https://www.nasa.gov/news-release/nasa-to-release-discuss-unidentified-anomalous-phenomena-report/ -
Source: nasa.gov
Title: marshall space flight center history
Link: https://www.nasa.gov/marshall/marshall-space-flight-center-history/ -
Source: plus.nasa.gov
Title: nasas marshall space flight center 1960s orientation film archival film
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Title: UAP Records
Link: https://www.aaro.mil/UAP-Records/ -
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Title: Chapter 10
Link: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Report_on_Unidentified_Flying_Objects/Chapter_10 -
Source: en.wikisource.org
Title: Chapter 2
Link: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Report_on_Unidentified_Flying_Objects/Chapter_2 -
Source: en.wikisource.org
Title: Chapter 5
Link: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Report_on_Unidentified_Flying_Objects/Chapter_5 -
Source: en.wikisource.org
Title: Index:AARO Historical Record Report Volume 1 2024
Link: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Index%3AAARO_Historical_Record_Report_Volume_1_2024.pdf -
Source: en.wikisource.org
Title: Page:AARO Historical Record Report Volume 1 2024
Link: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page%3AAARO_Historical_Record_Report_Volume_1_2024.pdf/8 -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/subndx/?id=lAL -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=107896 -
Source: nuforc.org
Title: NUFOR C Reports by Location NUFORC Reports by Location; USA
Link: https://nuforc.org/ndx/?id=loc -
Source: nuforc.org
Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=63941 -
Source: war.gov
Link: https://www.war.gov/ufo/?releaseDate=Release -
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Title: Project Blue Book, BBA PBSR10 300
Link: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/54/Project_Blue_Book%2C_BBA-PBSR10-300.pdf -
Source: upload.wikimedia.org
Title: Project Blue Book, BBA PBSR2 300
Link: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ea/Project_Blue_Book%2C_BBA-PBSR2-300.pdf -
Source: commons.wikimedia.org
Title: File:Project GRUDGE Report 1949
Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AProject_GRUDGE_Report_1949.pdf -
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Title: ufos natural explanations
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Title: ufo chiles whitted soviet spycraft air force coverup
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Link: https://www.apr.org/news/2023-09-12/small-town-flair-fyffe-celebrates-otherworldly-history-with-premier-summer-festival -
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Title: Encyclopedia of Alabama Fyffe
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Title: The Cullman Tribune Do you believe in the Metal Man?
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Title: Marshall Space Flight Center
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Space_Flight_Center -
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Brookley Air Force Base
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Source: airuniversity.af.edu
Link: https://www.airuniversity.af.edu/About/ -
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Title: nasa in alabama
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Title: Metal Man
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Title: Project Sign
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Title: Project Blue Book
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Additional References
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Link: https://www.nsa.gov/portals/75/documents/news-features/declassified-documents/ufo/usaf_fact_sheet_95_03.pdf -
Source: youtube.com
Title: US pilots saw cigar-shaped UFO but government destroyed the files
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMo5sY5mvcoSource snippet
Project Blue Book: America's Obsession with UFOs...
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Link: https://www.locallifesc.com/ufo-sightings-in-southern-skies/ -
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Link: https://www.reddit.com/r/aliens/comments/1g5wbgc/51st_anniversary_of_the_falkville_metal_man/ -
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Source: facebook.com
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Link: https://www.facebook.com/TheAirUniversity/ -
Source: linkedin.com
Link: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-air-university
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Related pages 49
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- +44 more in sidebar
- Chiles Whitted Case How Did the 1948 Chiles Whitted UFO Sighting Shape Aviation History?
- Falkville Metal Man What Happened During the 1973 Falkville 'Metal Man' Sighting?
- Fyffe Flap How Did Fyffe Become Alabama’s UFO Hotspot?
- Project Blue Book What Do Alabama’s UFO Files Reveal About Official Investigations?







