Actually, Metabunk and its members have solved
lots of cases where photos, eyewitness accounts etc. initially appeared to indicate that something strange was going on. Just look through the forum (perhaps we need a better way of tagging "Solved" or "Probably solved" threads).
Nolan, to his credit, gave a prosaic explanation for the "Starchild skull", but I'm not aware of him ever being the first person to give a prosaic explanation for a UFO sighting, even though it seems to be a subject he spends considerable time on.
He [Garry P. Nolan] also posted that Metabunk is "...a loose collection of non-scientific lay people. In my opinion, it's a third rate Facebook forum".
I guess we (Metabunk members) have the disadvantage that most of us are not academics getting a salary to do research in the things we discuss here. We do what we do here because we want to find out the truth about extraordinary claims and we dislike bunk.
We value the truth (to be a bit melodramatic).
Most of us understand the importance of testable evidence, and the need for hypotheses to be falsifiable.
(In passing, lay people have made some important contributions to human knowledge. I recall hearing about some clerk in the Swiss patent office writing some useful physics papers in 1905).
We don't have a "party line" that Earth cannot be visited by aliens, but perhaps most of us, at present, don't find the claimed evidence of alien visitation- which would be a discovery of momentous importance- at all convincing. In that, we are probably in the company of the overwhelming majority of astronomers, astrophysicists, archaeologists, biologists, defence officials...
Most of us have some antipathy to those who peddle bunk (not people who make honest mistakes or have unusual experiences that might seem to them inexplicable). Promoters of bunk do not value the truth, they value their own agendas at the expense of the truth and the public's understanding of what is real.
Again, I guess most of us take the publishing of a paper in a peer-reviewed journal* as some indication of scientific respectability, all other things being equal. (I know I do much of the time). We are also aware that sometimes, work with mistaken conclusions gets published; sadly so do deliberately fraudulent papers.
I'm sure many academics/ researchers are proud to get their work published in a peer-reviewed journal, and rightly so.
One of Garry Nolan's published papers which touches upon extraordinary claims is
"Improved instrumental techniques, including isotopic analysis, applicable to the characterization of unusual materials with potential relevance to aerospace forensics", Garry P. Nolan, Jacques F. Vallee, Sizun Jiang and Larry G. Lemke,
Progress in Aerospace Sciences Vol. 128, 1 January 2022, PDF of the paper as published viewable
here.
As well as brief descriptions of some investigative techniques whose potential use in aerospace forensics the authors fail to demonstrate or discuss in any way, and for which they provide no new insights, the authors conduct a "case study", spectrographically examining samples of slag-like material found at the site of a small fire in a park in Council Bluffs, Iowa in 1977 which some have associated with a UFO sighting.
Although finding nothing other-worldly about the material, or anything that corroborates the claims of two sets of identified witnesses, the authors go on to discuss why a UFO might want to dump approx. 35-50 lbs (around 15.8 to 22.7 kg) of melted metal.
They hypothesise that liquid metals used in a propulsion system, maybe the use of magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) generators, might be the answer:
External Quote:
Assuming a working fluid of aluminum-27 plus some percentage of phosphorus-31 (solitary stable isotopes of their respective elements) Roser speculated that depleted fluid might need to be occasionally ejected: "This discarded material would contain Al-27, P-11, iron from the original melt or housing erosion, plus isotopes of nuclei close to aluminum and phosphorus such as Mg, Na, Si and S." (Iron and Silicon were indeed found in our Council Bluffs samples, but the other elements were not present).
(My emphasis).
But hang on- the authors found aluminium 27 in
all of their 5 tested samples.
It might be the most abundant element present.
(See also their table "Fig. 8. A. Table of primary elements and their isotopes with ion counts for subsamples 1, 3, and 5", page 10.)
Nolan
et al. conduct a case study examining the composition of a material, in a paper supposedly discussing investigative techniques for use in aerospace forensics,
and can't remember that aluminium is a major constituent of their material?
How on earth does that happen? Presumably all four authors read the paper before it was submitted- and not one of them noticed?
The paper contains a number of other errors, questionable claims and examples of inadequate citations (I'm sure none were meant to be misleading), discussed in the "
Is "Improved Instrumental Techniques...", Nolan, Vallee, Jiang, Lemke 2022 a useful paper?" thread.
Indeed, their assertion
External Quote:
Similarly, liquid metal designs have been proposed for magneto- hydrodynamic (MHD) generators for the decomposition of toxic wastes and for superconducting airborne platforms [46]
(their italics) cites a paper which makes no such proposal, and which contains no mention of liquid metal whatsoever,
"System Considerations for Airborne, High Power Superconducting Generators", H. L. Southall, C. E. Oberly,
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics, 15 (1) 1979, PDF viewable at the above link.
But Nolan, Vallee
et al.'s "Improved instrumental techniques..." got published in a peer-reviewed journal.
Are there things we can learn from this? Possibly yes. Does the paper itself forward our understanding of UFO reports? Probably not.
Is the paper of use to those who might actually conduct forensic examination of aerospace artefacts? It seems very unlikely.
Does Metabunk challenge bunk and sometimes find the real reasons for things that might be mistaken as evidence of something extraordinary? Yes.
*With some exceptions- not all peer-reviewed journals are equal.