[I started compiling this some hours ago, since when
@Z.W. Wolf has made points which are in effect repeated here, particularly regarding the Moores:
This later testimony sounds as if it has taken elements from the Drake/James testimony.
Totally agree.]
My take follows.
Apologies to anyone involved in the Council Bluffs "incident" who might feel I've misrepresented them, but people misidentify things, young people sometimes get up to mischief, people will go out of their way to help friends and family.
I feel that, when extraordinary (and potentially important) claims are made, it is sometimes necessary to consider alternative explanations, even if they might be at odds with the accounts given by the claimants.
Many of the points are contestable but all, I think, are compatible with at least one of the accounts.
Different sources have contradictions, so there's some unavoidable cherry-picking of what details I think might be correct, likely, or possibly relevant.
Or maybe gooseberry-picking, because I like cherries but gooseberries not so much.
From a mixed bag of very old gooseberries, from a variety of providers, some of whom with maybe questionable records in the provision of fresh fruit. Any and all might be sour, overly hairy and unfit for consumption.
Examples of contradiction include details re. the role of Mike and Criss Moore, and their location after their initial sighting.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Boring digression about Mike and Criss Moore, whose involvement puzzles me. Skip to below next line if not interested.
External Quote:
Further south on Broadway Avenue, 24-year-old Mike Moore and his wife Criss had been driving east toward downtown, crossing the 16th street intersection when she first saw the object, described as round with "red lights blinking in sequence around the periphery." Mr. Moore saw it when they reached the Broadway viaduct... as a "bright- red thing at treetop level." He described it as "a big round thing hovering in the sky, below treetops. It was hovering. It wasn't moving."
Nolan, Vallee
et al., pg. 6 col. 2 4th para., their italics.
There is no mention of the Moores contacting the fire department (and what are the firemen supposed to do with a hovering UFO, hose it down? Send a bloke up a ladder?)
There is no mention of Mike and Criss Moore driving to the location (and what would
they do with a hovering UFO?) or contacting local police, or nearby Eppley airfield, or the USAF base at Omaha, who might have more of an interest in hovering UFOs than the fire department.
The USAF
Offutt Air Force Base (Wikipedia) is one of the most important airbases in the USA, home of U.S. Strategic Command. It is 16.1 miles, 25.9 km from Council Bluffs.
The Moores were travelling on West Broadway and over the Broadway viaduct. This is a major thoroughfare in Council Bluffs
(population 60,300 in 1970, 56,400 in 1980
https://worldpopulationreview.com/us-cities/iowa/council-bluffs).
It is part of a direct route, along with a section of I-480, connecting downtown (central) Council Bluffs and central Omaha.
It is hard to see how Criss Moore could have seen a minor fire on the ground on the far side of a levee in Big Lake Park from her location (although in fairness that was not her claim, which was she saw an object with red lights hovering at treetop level).
Mike Moore claimed to see something similar from Broadway viaduct, a raised structure which might have allowed a view over the northern Council Bluffs railyard to the park. The current viaduct is not the same structure as the one in 1977, so Street View etc. is of limited use in establishing this.
I'm
guessing the 1977 viaduct was well-lit, any lights in the vicinity of the probable burn site would be approx. 2.9 km/ 1.8 miles to the left of Mike, 90 degrees to his direction of travel. Light from a modest fire on the ground on the far side of a levee might be observable, but I doubt memorable, and unlikely to be mistaken as a hovering UFO. Considering the view would be over the length of the railyard with a line progressing northward, maybe an incident involving a train might have been a more likely identification (and possibly correct).
No-one else using West Broadway, the direct route between Omaha and downtown Council Bluffs, 19:45 on a Saturday, ever came forward as having seen anything unusual, on the ground or in the air.
Only the son and daughter-in-law of the Assistant Fire Chief who attended the burn. What are the odds?
No-one using Avenue G, parallel with West Broadway but over 500 yards/ metres closer to the burn site sees anything either.
Nolan, Vallee
et al. do not state that Mike Moore is the son of Jack Moore, the assistant fire chief who attended the incident.
Which is a strange oversight; relationships between claimed witnesses of extraordinary events are usually seen as potentially important, and at least one author (Vallee) is aware of Jack being the father of Mike.
The
Historical and Preservation Society of Pottawattamie County and
Popular Mechanics, May 2001 (pg. 67 of PDF) accounts, the latter assisted by one Jacques Vallee, give the Moore couple a broader role; the Historical Society has them driving to the park and then contacting the fire department, apparently overlapping with the role played by the Drake/ James family, at odds with the Nolan, Vallee 2022 narrative.
Popular Mechanics specifies that Mike is Jack's son, and that the Moores saw an object falling towards the park, which is not featured in the account of their supposed sighting by Nolan, Vallee
et al.
Popular Mechanics has "onlookers" arriving at the site of the burn but doesn't state that Mike and Criss went there or that they contacted the fire department.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Kenny Drake, 17, and his 12 year-old cousin Randy James, 'phoned the fire department from a payphone (probably inside or near the Richman Gordman store) and say they saw a red light shoot to the ground in the vicinity of Big Lake Park from a height of five or six hundred feet.
They claim they had been driving northwards to the Richman Gordman store with Kenny's wife Carol, 16, and they continued to the park where they found the material, burning brightly.
(In one of the lesser errors in the 2022 paper, Nolan, Vallee et al. refer to "Richmond Gordman Store", penultimate para. pg. 7).
External Quote:
...when Kenny Drake was making the 911 phone call, authorities were also contacted by a middle- aged couple who were travelling north on 16th street... They reported seeing a bright red mass "rocket to the ground near Big Lake". They refused to be identified on the record.
Nolan, Vallee
et al.
(1)
@Z.W. Wolf has pointed out the 911 system didn't exist in that area in 1977, another Nolan, Vallee
et al. error.
(2) Who are the "authorities"? I'd suggest police, perhaps not the fire dept., who had taken Kenny's call.
(3) Why 'phone, and describe yourself/selves as a middle-aged couple, but refuse to be identified?
(4) How did "the authorities" ascertain that the caller(s) were (a) a couple, (b) middle-aged?
(5) The caller claims they were driving on the same road, in the same direction, as Kenny Drake and family. No calls from travellers who had been on Interstate 29, Joslin Avenue, North 15th Street (or Big Lake Road, although it might have been quiet at night in December), all of which have stretches as close or closer to the likely site of the burning material. No calls, or later claimed witnesses, from anyone else actually at the large-ish Richman Gordman store/ its car park, 19:45, Saturday evening, 8 days before Christmas.
(6) The call is made at about the time that Kenny is in the vicinity of a payphone.
External Quote:
On that day, at 19:45 CST (0145 GMT) a red, luminous mass was observed by two Council Bluffs residents as it fell to earth near the northern city limits... ...The first report came at 7:45 p.m. from 17-year-old Kenny Drake and his nephew, 12-year-old Randy James, who were driving on North 16th street. Kenny's wife Carol, 16 years old, was also in the car.
Nolan, Vallee
et al. 2022.
I know this is 1977, but surely a young woman's account is at least as useful as a 12 year-old boy's?
External Quote:
The three drove to the park and got out to investigate, arriving to see a glowing orange blob with a bluish crystalline substance in its center on a dike about sixteen feet from the road. One of them noted it "looked like a great big sparkler." Lava-like material was running down the dike appearing to slow as it cooled. It was too hot to touch and ignited a small grass fire.
https://www.thehistoricalsociety.org/h/ufo.html
External Quote:
Drake and James drove to a local store and called 911
What's happened to Carol? She doesn't seem to subsequently feature at all. The only evidence of her presence is from Kenny (and maybe Randy's) accounts.
Drake and James claim that while they (and Carol) were in the park,
External Quote:
...watching the glowing mass, a small car stopped and four young men, about 18 years old, asked if they had seen "that thing fall out of the sky," after which they drove away
Again, these four young men have never come forward or otherwise been identified. They are known only from the Drake/ James account. How does Drake know the car is foreign? He doesn't state a make or easily identifiable model (Beetle, Mini. Fiat 500).
Having been asked the above question, it doesn't seem to occur to the Drakes or James to say "Yes, we think this is it". And the young men don't stop to look at the "...glowing orange blob with a bluish crystalline substance in its center" that "looked like a great big sparkler." Not even a "Cool, dude!" They just drive off, presumably on Big Lake Road.
Anyway, Drake calls the fire department:
External Quote:
The call was given to Jack Moore, Assistant fire chief for the Council Bluffs fire department, who responded in his personal fire car. No fire-fighting crews were required, however, while the police, who had intercepted the call, dispatched a cruiser car to the scene, driven by Assistant chief Moore. He requested an officer from the Identification section to join him with a camera to photograph the material that was "running, boiling down the edges of the levee. The center of it was way too hot to touch."
Nolan, Vallee
et al., my italics.
Likely another Nolan, Vallee
et al. error, unless both the local fire
and police departments have each sent an Assistant Chief Moore.
External Quote:
Officer Dennis Murphy arrived and took several pictures with both a Polaroid color camera and a 35 mm SLR camera
Ah. Dennis Murphy (no other police officers, certainly no Assistant Chief Moore) is mentioned in Vallee's 1998 paper, PDF attached in OP.
The somewhat confusing passage makes
most sense, I feel, if Jack Moore requested a police officer with a camera, and Murphy (good name for a US policeman!) attended; the quoted description of the material is from Moore.
By all accounts Jack Moore is puzzled (impressed?) by what he sees. There is a minor grass fire associated with the burning/ melted material, which does not require further fire department involvement.
There is precious little (read: none, AFAIK) further police involvement either.
My suspicion is:
It's December 1977. The big thing in cinema is
Close Encounters of the Third Kind, opening that very weekend at theatres across the US. Maybe in Council Bluffs.
Kenny Drake drove to Big Lake Park with his nephew. No Carol, whose presence was invoked to make the subsequent claims somehow more credible.
He tips approximately 35-55 pounds (15.9-25.0 kg) of fine metal scrap and thermite onto the ground on the north side of the levee, and lights it. It is possible
all the material was an improvised thermite.
The pie charts in Nolan, Vallee
et al. might support this if they are
broadly indicative of the relative amounts of material present in the (inhomogeneous) subsamples, although this is questionable, see OP.
Some trace elements possibly detected by Kayser (University of Iowa at Ames) and Nolan, Vallee
et al. might be explained by the inclusion of a small volume of electrical/ electronic component scrap, again discussed in the OP.
Although by no means impossible, slag containing small amounts of tungsten and tantalum, maybe germanium, in a mass composed mainly of similar-ish quantities of aluminium, iron and silicon would be quite exotic, I think; what was being smelted?
There's no small foreign car with four young men, no-one sees Drake and James.
Drake and James drive to the Richman Gordman Store.
Drake 'phones the fire department. He says he, his wife and nephew saw something fall etc. etc. etc.
(The description of the burn itself, including the "great big sparkler", is honest; it describes ignited, reacting thermite).
Then he 'phones "the authorities" (police?) claiming to be a middle-aged man who was driving with his wife when they saw etc. etc.
Drake and James return to the park.
Assistant Fire Chief Jack Moore arrives.
His description of the material is also consistent with a recent thermite reaction and melted metal.
There is no need for further fire department involvement. Jack Moore contacts the police, requesting an officer with a camera to document the scene.
Officer Murphy arrives, takes photos. Speculation: Murphy, and/ or his boss, are not as impressed as Moore seems to be.
It's a Saturday night, and the police have been called to attend a minor, self-limiting fire and possible case of fly-tipping (max. 55 Ibs, 25 kg) in a park, by an assistant fire chief who has already determined that no further fire department involvement is necessary. The fireman is apparently associating the burn with the story of something falling from the sky that the teenage boy is telling.
At some juncture- maybe not that evening- word gets back to Jack Moore, through some channel or another (maybe not official) that the police department was not entirely impressed, and was not wholly accepting of the metal-from-the-sky theory.
And at some juncture, Mike and Criss Moore, son and daughter-in-law of Jack, remember seeing a red thing, or a thing with red lights, hovering over the area of the find (but no-one else using the same major thoroughfare does).
Again, the chances of this- witnesses being the son and daughter-in-law of the attending assistant fire chief- must be low.
One active hoaxer, one other person (his 12 year old nephew) observing.
A man who believes him and who thinks something unusual has happened, Jack Moore.
A Kenny-caused hoax eliminates the mystery of the four young men in the car who never came forward, and the anonymous phone call from the middle-aged couple who never came forward.
It also explains why no-one except the above, except Mike and Criss Moore, ever reported seeing anything, in a town of over 50,000 people on a Saturday evening.
Mike and Criss Moore's extraordinarily fortuitous sighting, not corroborated by anyone else in Council Bluffs that Saturday evening (even Kenny Drake and Randy James' account is different from the original Moore account, as far as we can tell) vindicates Mike's father, Jack Moore.