Charles B. Moore
From Razing-Wiki
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Transcluded from Firestorm
- Names: "Thank you, all of McDonald's academic colleagues at the Institute of Atmospheric Physics and various Departments of the University of Arizona at Tucson who granted me interviews or otherwise helped with documentation: Drs. Paul E. Damon, Benjamin Herman, Philip Krider, Richard Kassander, Paul S. Martin, Al Mead, William Sellers, Dean Staley, Cornelius "Corny" Steelink, Raymond M. Turner. Thanks to his colleagues in other university and government settings who kindly gave interviews: Professor Charles B. Moore, Margaret Sanderson-Rae, James Hughes, Ethel Carpenter. I thank our colleagues in the UFO research field: Drs. Eugene Epstein, Eric Kelson, Mark Rodeghier, Dave Saunders, Bert E. Schwarz, Robert M. Wood, and to Ted Bloecher, David Branch, Paul Duich, George Earley, Idabel Epperson, Marilyn Epperson, Richard H. Hall, Rex E. Heflin, Henk Hinfelaar, Brenda Hinfelaar, Gordon Lore, Marty Lore, Bill Moore, Paul Norman, Roy Russell, Pearl Russell, James Westwood. Thanks also to Philip J. Klass, Jan McDonald, Dr. Robert Nathan, Stephan A. Schwartz.
Thank you, my writing buddies, for your constant help: Dorothy Shapiro, Alice Nordstrom, Helevi Nordstrom, Elton Boyer, Dr. Louise Ludwig. And a special thanks to my sweet husband, Charles K. Druffel, a true UFO skeptic who recognized in Jim McDonald a genuine manifestation of the reality of the UFO phenomenon and who, a few months before his own passage into the transcendental realm, accomplished a final edit, with his own red pencil, of the voluminous manuscript."[1]
Notes
- ↑ Druffel 2003: pp. VII-VIII
References
- Druffel, Ann (2003). Firestorm: Dr. James E. McDonald's Fight for UFO Science. Columbus, NC: Wild Flower Press. ISBN 0-926524-58-5.
Further Reading
External Links
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Transcluded from Wikipedia
Charles B. Moore, Jr. (October 28, 1920 – March 2, 2010)[1] was an American physicist, engineer and meteorologist, known for his work with gas balloons. He was born in Maryville, Tennessee.
He was a former participant in Project Mogul in the late 1940s, where his work in materials science allowed the construction of balloons which could better withstand cold temperatures, thereby allowing them to safely rise to significantly greater altitudes.
In the 1980s and 1990s, he also became known as a debunker of the so-called 1947 Roswell UFO incident, instead stating it was the crash of an undocumented Mogul balloon flight. In the process, he was accused of hoaxing a trajectory calculation of the alleged Mogul balloon flight in order to demonstrate that it could have been the crash object.[2] This calculation was presented in the Roswell book he co-wrote in 1997 (see below).
Ironically, Moore had a rather famous UFO sighting of his own in 1949, as did other Project Mogul personnel, which often occurred during Mogul and later Skyhook balloon flights.[3] Astronomer and UFO debunker Dr. Donald Menzel later tried to debunk the sighting as a mirage of their own balloon.
Responding to this in 1986, Moore wrote in a letter, "What I saw was not a mirage; it was a craft with highly unusual performance. It was not a balloon; at the time we were the innovators and manufacturers of the new balloons and I certainly would have known about any new developments as I was newly in charge of General Mills Balloon operations. It was not the X-1 that was in its hangar at Muroc that Sunday. It was nothing from White Sands nor from Alamogordo. ...We were in contact with Range Control and were informed our operation was the only one active on Sunday. For these reasons I am cynical about Dr. Menzel and his approach to science." [4]
According to astronomer Dr. J. Allen Hynek, a consultant to the Air Force on its UFO investigations, Moore likewise told him he was "disgusted" with the Air Force for its lack of attention to the sighting.
Moore was also known for his 1959 expedition to the stratosphere with Malcolm Ross, in which they performed the first spectrographic analysis of the planet Venus which was free of interference from the Earth's atmosphere, thereby proving the existence of water on that planet; this expedition involved an ascent to 89,000 feet (then a record for altitude).
He taught at New Mexico Tech for several years, and nominally retired in 1985; however, he continued his research afterward, and his subsequent discoveries led to the first improvement in the design of the lightning rod since that device's invention by Benjamin Franklin.[5]
[edit] Books
- UFO Crash at Roswell: The Genesis of a Modern Myth, by Benson Saler, Charles A. Zeigler, and Charles B. Moore, Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997, ISBN 1-56098-751-0.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- TIME.com's 1959 article on the Venus observation
- Article on Moore's election as a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
- NMIMT article about award of Honorary Ph.D. to C. B. Moore contains biographical information

