When
not bogged down in the Roswell Slides controversy, I sometimes engage in what I
think of as chasing footnotes. One of the purposes of a footnote is to tell
where the information originated so that the reader or others interested can review
that source for reliability, competence, and any additional information that
might be relevant. Too often I find that the footnotes do none of that leaving
us with questions about how good that information might be.
Although
I don’t mean to pick on Dick Hall and his The
UFO Evidence, I find that sometimes
the footnotes just don’t add much to our knowledge. On page 121 of that book,
Hall wrote:
Venezuela
also has a history of sightings by airline pilots and other experienced
observers. An orange light closed in on a Venezuelan airliner at 6:45 p.m.,
January 2, 1955, in the vicinity of Punta San Juan. When the UFO was at close
range, the bright light from it shone into the cockpit of the plane
intermittently.
According
to the footnote, the information came from The
APRO Bulletin of April 1955. That entry said:
An
orange-tinted light closed in an [sic] a commercial airliner in the vicinity of
Punta San Juan, Venezuela at 6:45 p.m. January 2, 1955. The pilot, co-pilot and
two other crew members watched the thing until, at close range, it focused some
kind of bright light into the cockpit of the plane, at intervals of a few
seconds.
And
that is all the information that is available. There are no crew member names
associated with this, no airline name, it assumes there is a “thing” close by
and there is nothing to help us find out what might have happened. There is no
way to verify the information, which makes the footnote provided by Dick Hall
worthless. It doesn’t provide additional information other than a source that
contains the same information and nothing more.
In
today’s world, if I was writing the book which was supposed to provide solid
evidence for UFOs, I would leave this case out. The only reason it is
interesting is the alleged flight crew involvement. If it wasn’t for that, this
would case would be ignored. In fact, had it been reported to Project Blue Book
(which it wasn’t according to the Blue Book Master Index), it would have been
stamped “Insufficient Data for a Scientific Analysis,” and rightly so.
There
is another issue with footnotes as well. Richard Dolan, in his UFOs and the National Security State,
reported on what Bill Brazel had said about finding some small pieces of debris
on the infamous ranch in the Roswell region (page 21). The footnote credits Don
Berliner and Stan Friedman for the data (page 84 – 85) of their book, Crash at Corona. They provide some long
quotes attributed to Bill Brazel, but there is nothing to tell when or where
the interview was conducted. The implication is that they had conducted the
interview themselves at some point probably in Brazel’s home, but that isn’t
the case.
The
interview in question was conducted on February 19, 1989 in Carrizozo, New
Mexico by Don Schmitt and me. I created the transcript of the taped interview,
and that was shared with Berliner and Friedman. Dolan’s footnote takes you to
one source but not the other, original source. You might disagree with the
information provided by Brazel, but the tape of that interview does exist so it
can be proven that the information as outlined in UFO Crash at Roswell by Schmitt and me contains an accurate
transcription of the interview. This gets you to the original source for the quotes
which are the point of this exercise.
The
problem with the Berliner and Friedman version is that they have altered the
interview so that it tends to corroborate the tales told by Gerald Anderson.
They added, in brackets, the word “black” in front of the word “sergeant” who
had come to interview Brazel much later. There is nothing in the transcript or
in the later interviews with Brazel to suggest that any of the soldiers who
visited him were of African-American ancestry. In fact, he flat out denied it
and that he never said it.
In
fact that point came up several years later when another researcher asked me
about the discrepancy. Although it had been suggested that Brazel used another
derogatory word for the sergeant, that wasn’t true. The racial makeup of that
team never came up because they were all Caucasian.
These
two footnotes illustrate the importance of proper collection of data and
providing that data to the reader… oh hell, I know, I could point a finger at
myself for that. I have used footnotes that referenced other work that failed
to take it to its ultimate conclusion. Sometimes that just isn’t possible, but
in other cases, especially in the world of the Internet, it is extremely
simple.
4 comments:
Good advice Kevin.
I figure there are two different reasons to footnote ones work:
1 To fool the reader into thinking you actually did some research
2 To assist the reader in going deeper into the subject
Hopefully the footnotes I provide in my upcoming report will fall into number 2.
I love it when I peek at the footnotes and it's just Ibid over and over again.
I think many people simply confuse footnotes with references. A reference is simply that - a referral to another source. A footnote should, if it is a genuine footnote, say a bit more about the said topic but not too much. A footnote can also be placed in parentheses in the main text, but some readers may dislike too many parentheses.
Great article KR. One time I sent myself on a wild goose chase pursuing a reference which turned out to have cited the wrong journal title altogether.
Thank goodness for a helpful librarian who pointed me to another journal that had a similar title, which actually contained the article I was seeking. Accuracy in citing sources is very important, to say the least.
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