Materials Discovered at Roswell Crash Site Could be Non-Human Technology

Could metallic debris recovered and tested by a geologist prove that a UFO crashed near Roswell in 1947?

Ryan Sprague
7 min readJun 23, 2024

Frank Kimbler is an Assistant Professor of Earth Science at the New Mexico Military Institute, in Roswell, New Mexico. Having worked as a professional geologist for over thirty years, he also worked as an oceanographer for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, topping off his accomplishments as a mining engineer for the State of Arizona. In 2009, he relocated to New Mexico to accept a teaching position at the military institute.

Shortly after moving to Roswell, Kimbler took a keen interest in the omnipresent and arguably unsolved case of the Roswell UFO crash. After speaking with several locals and UFO researchers, Kimbler triangulated the supposed crash site and would start making the trek out to the desert, with his teenage son, to look for any sort of evidence left behind from the alleged 1947 crash. Armed with metal detectors and unwavering curiosity and patience, he and his son, to their astonishment, would find that evidence and cracked the Roswell mystery wide open yet again.

In October of 2018, I flew to Roswell to meet Kimbler and his son. They would take me to the alleged…

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