Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The VZ-9AV Avrocar was an attempt to build a stealthy aircraft that could fly at high speeds. The project was projected to cost $3 ...
The National Archives recently declassified documents showing design diagrams for the Avrocar, a flying saucer look-a-like unsuccessfully developed by the U.S. Air Force in the 1950s. Information ...
Meet the VZ-9AV Avrocar: Is the alien spacecraft that crashed in Roswell, New Mexico, back in July 1947 now in the collection of the National Museum of the United States Air Force? It certainly could ...
Unidentified flying objects (UFOs) or flying saucers became a cultural obsession since amateur pilot Kenneth Arnold reported sightings of flashing bright lights around the skies of Mineral, Washington ...
You read it well: the U.S. Air Force developed a real Flying Saucer. Even though newly declassified documents concerning the U.S. flying saucer projects already made the news when they were released ...
A recent article in the New York Times cited sources' comments that U.S. government contractors are in possession of metal alloys and other parts "recovered from unidentified aerial phenomena." This ...
UNDER A CLEAR BLUE SKY ON MAY 27, 1959, THE DOORS OF A HANGAR at Toronto’s Malton Airport parted with a rumble. As a crowd of reporters watched, fascinated, four men in white lab coats rolled out what ...
The VZ-9AV Avrocar was an attempt to build a stealthy aircraft that could fly at high speeds. The project was projected to cost $3.16 million in the 1950s, approximately $26 million today. Test ...