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8 January 2026
- 22:5422:54, 8 January 2026 Friedman, Stanton (hist | edit) [4,157 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Stanton Friedman is one of the best-known “scientific” ufologists of the late 20th century, notable for combining a technical persona with relentless public advocacy that UFOs represent a real, unresolved phenomenon. He became a central figure in Roswell-era research debates and in the long-running argument over government secrecy. On UAPedia, Friedman should be treated as a top-tier influencer: not because he “solved” UFOs, but because he p...")
- 22:4922:49, 8 January 2026 Freixedo, Salvador (hist | edit) [4,009 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Salvador Freixedo is a prominent Spanish-language UFO writer remembered for combining ufology with sharp critiques of religious narratives and with a darker interpretation of non-human intelligence. He is important on UAPedia because he represents a major non-English tradition: a body of UFO literature that treats the phenomenon as psychologically, culturally, and spiritually manipulative rather than purely technological. <h2>Background</h2> Freixe...")
- 22:4122:41, 8 January 2026 Fravor, David (hist | edit) [4,170 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> David Fravor is a retired U.S. Navy pilot best known in UAP history as a primary witness to the 2004 USS Nimitz Carrier Strike Group “Tic Tac” encounter. His account became one of the most-cited modern UAP narratives because it sits at the intersection of trained-observer testimony, military context, and later media amplification. On UAPedia, Fravor’s entry should prioritize (1) what he personally reported, (2) how the story entered public rec...")
- 22:3322:33, 8 January 2026 Fox, James (hist | edit) [4,685 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> James Fox is a leading UFO documentary filmmaker whose work significantly shaped how mainstream audiences encountered the UAP topic in the 2000s–2020s. His films are often structured around credibility signaling: trained observers, official roles, and institutional behavior, presented in a tone designed to feel investigative rather than sensational. On UAPedia, Fox is best categorized as a “media architect” whose impact comes from narrative pa...")
- 22:2522:25, 8 January 2026 Media ListFowler, Raymond (hist | edit) [417 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h1>Books</h1> <div class="fs-5 fw-bold"> <h2 class="fs-4">Non-Fiction</h2> <p>The Andreasson Affair (1979)<br>https://www.amazon.com/Andreasson-Affair-Story-Encounter-Fourth/dp/1601633467</p> <p>The Allagash Abductions (1993)<br>https://www.amazon.com/s?k=The+Allagash+Abductions+Raymond+E+Fowler</p> <p>The Watchers (Selected / series)<br>https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Raymond+E.+Fowler+The+Watchers</p> </div>")
- 22:2422:24, 8 January 2026 Fowler, Raymond (hist | edit) [4,510 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Raymond Fowler is a defining figure in abduction-era ufology, best known for turning extended experiencer accounts into structured, book-length case narratives. His significance lies less in “one smoking gun” and more in the way his publications shaped public expectations of what an abduction case looks like: extended testimony, investigative interviews, and attempts at corroboration within the limits of the era. On UAPedia, he belongs in the...")
- 22:1822:18, 8 January 2026 Fontana, David (hist | edit) [1,406 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> David Fontana is best known for writing on psychology, spirituality, and psychical research–adjacent topics rather than UFO investigation specifically. He can still be useful on UAPedia as an adjacent reference for experiencer psychology, interpretation, and the wider “anomalous experience” ecosystem that overlaps with UFO narratives. <h2>Background</h2> Fontana’s work is broad and heavily publication-driven. His relevance comes from themes...")
- 22:0922:09, 8 January 2026 Fort, Charles (hist | edit) [4,252 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Charles Fort is a cornerstone figure for UFO and anomalistics culture, even though he wrote before “flying saucers” became a modern genre. His enduring importance is methodological: he treated odd reports as meaningful data points and built a systematic habit of collecting, comparing, and challenging consensus dismissal. On UAPedia, Fort is the “root trunk” biography that explains why ufology is not just sightings—it is also a tradition of...")
- 21:5821:58, 8 January 2026 Foley, Dave (hist | edit) [1,103 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Dave Foley is primarily known as an entertainer, but he appears in UAP discussions due to a public description of a UFO sighting. On UAPedia, he fits as an “adjacent figure” entry: relevant for cultural diffusion, not for research output. <h2>Background</h2> Foley’s public profile comes from comedy and television. His UAP relevance is tied to how celebrity testimony can influence stigma and public curiosity. <h2>Ufology career</h2> Foley is...")
- 21:3721:37, 8 January 2026 Fanthorpe, Lionel (hist | edit) [3,768 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Lionel Fanthorpe is a British Fortean writer and media figure associated with UFOs, paranormal investigation, and “mysteries” publishing. On UAPedia he is best treated as a cultural force-multiplier: someone who expanded audience interest and maintained a pipeline of strange-case storytelling across decades. <h2>Background</h2> Fanthorpe’s identity is multi-lane: author, lecturer, and TV personality, often referenced in the UK anomalistics sc...")
- 21:2921:29, 8 January 2026 Félix, Aladino (hist | edit) [3,480 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Aladino Félix—better known in UFO literature by the pen name Dino Kraspedon—is a Brazilian contactee figure associated with claims of extraterrestrial contact and the publication of a prominent Brazilian flying-saucer narrative. He is notable on UAPedia because his story shows how “contact” claims can merge with ideology, charisma, and movement-building. <h2>Background</h2> Félix’s public identity is complex: he is discussed both as a s...")
- 04:0304:03, 8 January 2026 Evans, Hilary (hist | edit) [4,296 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Hilary Evans was a British researcher and author known for wide-ranging work on UFOs and other anomalous phenomena. In ufology, Evans stands out for his “reference-builder” approach: assembling large compilations, editing multi-author anthologies, and treating the field as something that benefits from organized archives and comparative catalogs rather than only from sensational claims. <h2>Background</h2> Evans co-founded the Mary Evans Picture...")
- 03:5703:57, 8 January 2026 Esposito, Michael (hist | edit) [2,585 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Michael Esposito is primarily an anomalous phenomena researcher associated with Electronic Voice Phenomena (EVP). He is best treated as ufology-adjacent: part of the wider paranormal research culture that overlaps with UFO communities but centers on different evidence types and traditions. <h2>Background</h2> Esposito’s public biography emphasizes communication theory interests and long-running involvement in paranormal investigations, especially...")
- 03:4903:49, 8 January 2026 Edwards, Frank (hist | edit) [4,324 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Frank Edwards was a mid-20th-century American broadcaster and author who became one of the best-known popularizers of UFO reports and other anomalies. In ufology history, his role is foundational to the “mass-market UFO book” era: the idea that flying saucers could be presented in a sober, news-adjacent tone and sold to a mainstream audience. <h2>Background</h2> Edwards built a public profile in radio and news-style broadcasting before becoming...")
- 03:4303:43, 8 January 2026 Egnew, Danielle (hist | edit) [2,627 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Danielle Egnew is a psychic medium, musician, and media personality whose public work overlaps with ufology through paranormal television appearances and “mystery” programming. On UAPedia, she fits best as a ufology-adjacent figure: part of the broader paranormal media ecosystem that sometimes includes UFO segments and branding. <h2>Background</h2> Egnew’s public profile spans entertainment and paranormal media, blending personal-identity sto...")
- 03:3403:34, 8 January 2026 Emenegger, Robert (hist | edit) [3,830 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Robert Emenegger is best known in ufology as a 1970s-era documentary writer whose work helped shape “mainstream TV documentary” UFO storytelling. His influence comes from packaging case histories into an authoritative broadcast format and from long-running controversy over alleged government cooperation and promised-but-unreleased materials. <h2>Background</h2> Emenegger worked in film/media contexts and became involved in producing and writing...")
- 03:2603:26, 8 January 2026 Elizondo, Luis (hist | edit) [4,639 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Luis “Lue” Elizondo is a former U.S. military intelligence and Department of Defense-associated figure who became one of the most visible public advocates for UAP “disclosure” in the late 2010s and 2020s. In contemporary ufology, his impact is less about field investigation and more about catalyzing mainstream attention, government-watchdog narratives, and media framing of UAP as a national-security issue. <h2>Background</h2> Elizondo’s p...")
- 03:1703:17, 8 January 2026 Eldem, Burak (hist | edit) [3,428 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Eldem,_Burak <h2>Introduction</h2> Burak Eldem is a Turkish writer and researcher whose work sits at the intersection of alternative history, archaeo-astronomy, and “ancient astronaut” style speculation. He is best known for books that reframe ancient Mesopotamian and other traditions through a modern conspiratorial and cyclical-catastrophe lens. <h2>Background</h2> Eldem has been described as a writer/researcher with experience in media and programming, and he buil...")
- 03:0103:01, 8 January 2026 Dupont, Jonas (hist | edit) [2,240 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Jonas Dupont is more commonly positioned as a fortean/paranormal-adjacent figure than a core ufologist. In UAPedia-style coverage, he fits best as an “adjacent” entry when mapping the broader ecosystem of anomalous claims that often overlap with ufology audiences. <h2>Background</h2> Writers in the Dupont lineage are typically associated with compiling unusual reports—odd deaths, strange lights, uncanny events—and treating them as meaningfu...")
- 02:5702:57, 8 January 2026 Drake, Raymond (hist | edit) [2,905 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> W. Raymond Drake is best known as an author in the ancient-astronaut/paleo-contact tradition, arguing that myths and religious narratives preserve traces of extraterrestrial visitation. In ufology-adjacent history he represents the prolific “regional survey” style: book after book applying the same hypothesis across different civilizations. <h2>Background</h2> Drake’s work reflects a mid-century hunger for synthesis—taking archaeology, comp...")
- 01:5801:58, 8 January 2026 Downing, Barry (hist | edit) [2,891 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Barry Downing is known in ufology-adjacent literature for promoting a theological reading of UFOs—most famously through The Bible and Flying Saucers. His work sits inside “religious ufology,” where biblical narratives are interpreted as descriptions of technologically advanced beings and vehicles rather than purely supernatural events. <h2>Background</h2> Downing’s background as a minister and scholar shaped a distinct voice: rather than ar...")
- 01:5301:53, 8 January 2026 Dolan, Richard (hist | edit) [3,889 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Richard Dolan is a prominent American UFO historian known for framing the UFO phenomenon through the lens of government secrecy, Cold War politics, and national security institutions. He is most associated with long-form historical synthesis—building chronologies, mapping policy incentives, and arguing that the “UFO problem” is inseparable from state power and information control. <h2>Background</h2> Dolan’s entry point into ufology is ofte...")
- 01:4601:46, 8 January 2026 Dione, Robert (hist | edit) [2,612 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Robert (R. L.) Dione was an American writer associated with early “ancient astronaut” and biblical-UFO interpretations. He is mainly remembered for a small set of books that read scripture through a space-age lens, asserting that “divine” events were misunderstood technology. <h2>Background</h2> Dione was a schoolteacher and World War II veteran whose later-life authorship reflected a broader cultural moment: rockets, space exploration, and...")
- 01:4101:41, 8 January 2026 Devereux, Paul (hist | edit) [3,404 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Paul Devereux is best known in ufology for “earthlights” research—arguing that some UFO experiences may be triggered by unusual natural light phenomena associated with geological conditions. His work sits between ufology, environmental anomaly research, and folklore studies, often challenging the assumption that every UFO report implies a vehicle. <h2>Background</h2> Devereux’s approach emphasizes landscape context: where an event occurs, w...")
- 01:3101:31, 8 January 2026 Dennis, Glenn (hist | edit) [3,333 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Glenn Dennis is a Roswell-linked ufology figure associated with both institutional legacy (the International UFO Museum and Research Center) and a controversial witness narrative connected to alleged bodies and mortuary calls after the 1947 incident. In Roswell literature he is often treated as a “star witness,” with significant skepticism directed at key parts of his account. <h2>Background</h2> Dennis worked in mortuary services and had a bus...")
- 01:2601:26, 8 January 2026 Dewilde, Marius (hist | edit) [2,461 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Marius Dewilde is best known as a French close-encounter witness from the 1954 UFO wave in France. His story is often discussed in ufology as a “classic” early humanoid-encounter narrative with alleged traces and rapid press amplification. <h2>Background</h2> Dewilde was a railway worker living near the tracks in Quarouble, Nord. The setting—tracks, night disturbance, and sudden proximity—helped cement the case as memorable and repeatedly r...")
- 01:1901:19, 8 January 2026 DeLonge, Tom (hist | edit) [4,855 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Tom DeLonge is a musician and entertainment entrepreneur who became a high-visibility figure in modern UAP culture by coupling media production with “disclosure” advocacy. In ufology, his importance is less about classic casework and more about accelerating mainstream attention, packaging, and distribution. <h2>Background</h2> DeLonge built a global platform through music, then expanded into film, publishing, and branded storytelling. That reac...")
- 01:1401:14, 8 January 2026 Dean, Robert (hist | edit) [3,648 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Robert Dean was an American ufologist known for presenting himself as a retired senior enlisted U.S. Army figure who encountered classified NATO material about UFOs. In ufology he is most associated with claims about a SHAPE/NATO briefing document and a long-running argument that governments privately treat UFOs as real but socially destabilizing. <h2>Background</h2> Dean described a lengthy military career culminating as a Command Sergeant Major,...")
- 01:0801:08, 8 January 2026 Davenport, Peter (hist | edit) [3,449 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Peter Davenport is best known as the director of the National UFO Reporting Center (NUFORC), a major public clearinghouse for UFO sighting reports in the United States. His influence comes less from a single theory and more from the sustained, operational work of collecting, sorting, and publishing reports. <h2>Background</h2> Davenport’s public biography emphasizes formal education and language/science training, and he has presented himself as a...")
- 00:5900:59, 8 January 2026 Däniken, Erich von (hist | edit) [3,876 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Erich von Däniken is a Swiss author best known for arguing that extraterrestrials influenced early human cultures—an idea often called “ancient astronauts” or “paleo-contact.” His work sits at the intersection of UFO belief, pseudoarchaeology, and pop history, and it has had outsized cultural impact regardless of scholarly rejection. <h2>Background</h2> Von Däniken rose from hospitality work into publishing through a flair for dramatic...")
- 00:3700:37, 8 January 2026 Cornell, Tony (hist | edit) [2,147 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Tony Cornell is known for long-term work in psychical research and for writing about how paranormal investigations can be conducted and documented. While not a UFO specialist, his methods and casework culture overlap with ufology’s ongoing debates about evidence, field practice, and investigator bias. <h2>Background</h2> Cornell’s standing comes from sustained involvement in psychical research organizations and a reputation for careful case han...")
- 00:3200:32, 8 January 2026 Corliss, William (hist | edit) [2,313 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> William R. Corliss is best known for compiling handbooks of anomalies—astronomical and natural phenomena that appear odd, rare, or difficult to explain. He is relevant to UAPedia because ufology often overlaps with “Fortean” research culture, and Corliss is one of the best-known anomaly compilers. <h2>Background</h2> Corliss’s work is bibliographic: collecting reports, references, and descriptions in a structured format. This makes him a...")
- 00:2700:27, 8 January 2026 Coppens, Philip (hist | edit) [2,329 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Philip Coppens is best known for popular writing that connects historical mysteries and ancient-aliens style hypotheses. He is important to UAPedia as a major contributor to the modern “deep history + ET” narrative stream that runs parallel to nuts-and-bolts UFO investigation. <h2>Background</h2> Coppens built his profile through accessible, media-friendly writing focused on historical puzzles, alternative interpretations, and the possibility o...")
- 00:2100:21, 8 January 2026 Cooper, Bill (hist | edit) [2,438 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Milton "Bill" Cooper is a seminal figure in conspiracy-oriented ufology, best known for Behold a Pale Horse and for broadcasting that blended UFO claims with wide-ranging allegations about government secrecy. He is important to UAPedia because his influence is measurable: his narratives became templates reused across decades of online discourse. <h2>Background</h2> Cooper’s public identity is rooted in broadcasting and authorship rather than in m...")
- 00:1400:14, 8 January 2026 Condon, Edward (hist | edit) [2,569 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Edward U. Condon is a physicist strongly associated with the University of Colorado’s Air Force–commissioned UFO study, commonly called the “Condon Committee,” and its influential final report. In ufology history, this is one of the biggest institutional inflection points: a report that many cite as legitimizing official disengagement. <h2>Background</h2> Condon’s standing comes from mainstream physics and institutional science. That stat...")
- 00:0800:08, 8 January 2026 Cook, Nick (hist | edit) [2,369 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Nick Cook is an aerospace/defense journalist best known for The Hunt for Zero Point, an influential book exploring claims of anti-gravity research and classified propulsion programs. He is central to the “technology-secrecy” side of UFO-adjacent discourse. <h2>Background</h2> Cook’s credibility in these discussions is tied to defense journalism rather than to classic UFO investigation organizations. His work resonates with audiences intereste...")
- 00:0000:00, 8 January 2026 Cohane, John (hist | edit) [2,170 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> John Philip Cohane is most relevant to ufology for Paradox, a popular speculative work arguing for extraterrestrial involvement in human origins. He fits UAPedia as a bridge between UFO interest and alternative deep-history narratives. <h2>Background</h2> Cohane wrote for general audiences, presenting large historical claims in an accessible style. His work is often discussed as part of the early “ancient astronaut” reading lineage. <h2>Ufolog...")
7 January 2026
- 23:5423:54, 7 January 2026 Colby, C. B. (hist | edit) [2,030 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> C. B. Colby is best known for eerie and “strangely enough” style compilations that blend mystery storytelling with a true-or-tall-tale vibe. He is relevant to UAPedia as a cultural upstream influence: the kind of popular weird-literature that primes audiences for UFO and paranormal interest. <h2>Background</h2> Colby’s work is more anthology and entertainment than investigation. His entries often present unusual claims in a fast, memorable fo...")
- 21:4121:41, 7 January 2026 Clarke, David (hist | edit) [2,343 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> David Clarke is a British academic and journalist known for research on UFO reports, folklore, and the release-era culture around government UFO files. On UAPedia, he fits as an “archives + cultural tradition” figure rather than a purely believer or purely debunker archetype. <h2>Background</h2> Clarke’s work is grounded in folklore/cultural tradition research and investigative journalism. This combination makes him useful for explaining why...")
- 21:3621:36, 7 January 2026 Clark, Jerome (hist | edit) [2,480 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Jerome Clark is a leading UFO historian and reference author best known for compiling large-scale UFO encyclopedias. He is essential to UAPedia as a “map-maker” of the field: people, cases, concepts, and the shifting boundaries between folklore, misidentification, and unresolved reports. <h2>Background</h2> Clark’s work reflects deep engagement with the historical record of UFO reports and the organizations and personalities that shaped moder...")
- 21:1721:17, 7 January 2026 Clancy, Susan (hist | edit) [2,503 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Susan A. Clancy is a psychologist known for writing about alien-abduction belief through the lens of memory, sleep phenomena, and suggestion. She is important on UAPedia as a core “critical framework” author used to interpret experiencer narratives without assuming literal extraterrestrial kidnapping. <h2>Background</h2> Clancy’s work is frequently discussed in relation to how vivid experiences can be sincerely reported while still being mist...")
- 21:1221:12, 7 January 2026 Childress, David (hist | edit) [2,733 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> David Hatcher Childress is a prolific alternative-history author known for books on lost civilizations, unusual artifacts, and fringe technology themes that often overlap with “ancient aliens” style ufology-adjacent narratives. His influence is less about modern UFO case files and more about the deep-past mythos that UFO culture frequently draws upon. <h2>Background</h2> Childress built a long-running author identity through series publishing a...")
- 21:0521:05, 7 January 2026 Chauvin, Remy (hist | edit) [2,021 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Rémy Chauvin is known for writings that treat UFOs and anomalous reports as part of a wider study of “unknown” phenomena. He is relevant on UAPedia as an example of European science-linked interest in UFO questions. <h2>Background</h2> Chauvin’s reputation is grounded in scientific work, with UFO-related writing framed more as exploratory inquiry than as entertainment. <h2>Ufology career</h2> His ufology involvement is primarily through boo...")
- 21:0121:01, 7 January 2026 Chalker, Bill (hist | edit) [2,539 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Bill Chalker is an Australian UFO researcher and author known for documenting Australia’s UFO history and notable case material. His work ranges from archival/government-file framing to more controversial “evidence” claims connected to abduction narratives. <h2>Background</h2> Chalker is often described as a long-running researcher in the Australian scene, with attention to both historical recordkeeping and presentational clarity for general...")
- 20:5520:55, 7 January 2026 Cathie, Bruce (hist | edit) [2,460 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Bruce Cathie is known for proposing that UFO activity relates to a planetary “grid” or harmonic structure that can be used for navigation and energy extraction. He is commonly cited in the “Earth energy grid” branch of ufology. <h2>Background</h2> Cathie’s public identity is strongly tied to authorship, especially works that present a unifying theory rather than case-file investigation. On UAPedia, he fits as a “model builder” whose c...")
- 20:4820:48, 7 January 2026 Cassirer, Manfred (hist | edit) [2,307 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Manfred Cassirer is best known in this context for writing on the intersection of parapsychology and UFO topics. His ufology relevance is primarily conceptual: he is used to argue that “UFO phenomena” may involve psychological/psi dimensions beyond straightforward physical craft explanations. <h2>Background</h2> Cassirer wrote from a perspective that treats paranormal claims as potentially informative to the UFO question. On UAPedia, he fits wi...")
- 20:4220:42, 7 January 2026 Carlson, Amy (hist | edit) [2,672 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Amy Carlson is best known as the leader of the “Love Has Won” movement, presenting herself as a divine figure called “Mother God.” She is not a ufologist in the classic sense, but she is relevant to UAPedia as part of the broader modern ecosystem where UFO beliefs, conspiracies, channeling claims, and New Age movements cross-pollinate. <h2>Background</h2> Her public trajectory is primarily documented through reporting and documentary covera...")
- 20:3620:36, 7 January 2026 Cannon, Dolores (hist | edit) [3,132 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Dolores Cannon is a highly influential author in experiencer-oriented ufology, best known for books that present alien-contact and cosmic-history narratives derived from hypnotherapy/regression sessions. Her work sits at the intersection of UFO belief, New Age spirituality, and reincarnation themes. <h2>Background</h2> She worked as a hypnotherapist and built a publishing identity around the idea that hypnosis can recover hidden knowledge about hum...")
- 20:2920:29, 7 January 2026 Cameron, Grant (hist | edit) [2,834 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Grant Cameron is a Canadian UFO researcher and author known for writing about secrecy, disclosure politics, and the long arc of government involvement in UFO narratives. He is also strongly associated with the “Charlie Red Star” sightings, which he has described as a personal entry point into ufology. <h2>Background</h2> Cameron’s public identity is built around long-term research, publishing, and conference/media presence. On UAPedia, he fit...")
- 20:2220:22, 7 January 2026 Caluag, Ed (hist | edit) [2,606 bytes] Robert.francis.jr (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<h2>Introduction</h2> Ed Caluag is a Filipino paranormal investigator and media personality known for high-visibility TV segments focused on hauntings, alleged entities, and supernatural claims. While not a classic “UFO researcher,” he fits UAPedia’s broader coverage of fringe-investigation culture and how audiences interpret extraordinary reports. <h2>Background</h2> Caluag is described as a licensed professional teacher who later became prominent for paranormal...")