At the newly opened National UFO Historical Records Center – an array of beige buildings on the grounds of the Martin Luther King Jr elementary school in Rio Rancho, New Mexico – records detailing unexplained aerial objects and public fears around them fill dozens of filing cabinets.
For director David Marler, this first-of-its-kind public archive of historical UFO records is the culmination of a lifelong interest in and investigation of UFOs – or, as the military now prefers to designate, UAPs: unidentified anomalous phenomena.
It arrives at an opportune moment: in recent years, congressional and Senate hearings have thrust the subject – which rises and falls in public attention, often at times of national or political insecurity – back into the spotlight.