Paul was a prodigious investigator for the Victorian UFO Society (VUFORS) and was instrumental in facilitating the 1967 visit to Australia of Dr. James McDonald. Originally from the United States he had strong ties with the NICAP group as well as other US groups and researchers.
Some of the many significant cases he was involved with included the Burkes Flat case of 1966, the 1972-1973 Maureen Puddy affair, the 1977-1978 Leitchville-Echuca flap, the Valentich case of 1978, the 1980 Rosedale landing case, and the 1988 Knowles family case. He helped facilitate the involvement of US researcher Dr. Bruce Maccabee in the famous 1978 New Zealand Kaikoura case.
A passionate advocate of the VUFORS way of doing things he was fond of casting some groups and individuals as examples of "malfunction junctions" and "armchair ufologists" even viewing me and the Sydney based group UFOIC in this vein (indeed he cast these labels far and wide). I never let these dubious characterisations diminish my assessment of his achievements.
Paul Norman's UFO legacy is both broad and substantial. His extensive field investigations and interactions with media and authorities were sustained and very extensive.
My condolences to his family and friends.
Here is the 1980 Gippsland Times story featuring Paul Norman and Pat Gildea of VUFORS with the Rosedale witness George Blackwell. This event was also investigated by Keith Basterfield and myself (both recipients of Paul's "malfunction junction" and "armchair ufologist" labelling), on location with the witness's support and encouragement. Below are photos of myself and Keith Basterfield with the Rosedale witness on site at Rosedale in December 1980. We certainly agreed with Paul Norman's assessment that the Rosedale case was a very impressive example of a UFO landing and physical trace event. Indeed, I would consider it to be one of the best examples of "a close encounter of the second kind" in Australia.
Do you know the exact time of death? I'm wondering if it was June 23rd or June 22nd in the USA when he died.
ReplyDeleteIntriguing that he passed away so close to the 65th anniversary of the beginning of modern ufology, which occurred on June 24, 1947.
http://copycateffect.blogspot.com/2012/06/st-johns-day.html
Hi Loren,
ReplyDeleteI suggest you try John Auchettl directly at praufo@yahoo.com.au to see if you can get clarification on this. I don't know what sort of reception you will get from John.
Regards,
Bill Chalker
I always like to quote one of the thing Paul said about investigating UFOs. A quick telephone interview could ususally tell the investigator if the case was worth the effort of a follow up. Most then could be dismissed as too vague or probably IFOs. (Yes, indeed you might miss a good every once in awhile, but with limited resources this is the way to go.)
ReplyDeleteSimple, simple, but if you look at the corpus of Project Blue Book files, huge effort expended on trivial cases, but almost none on some very puzzling and significant reports.
Condon had a good screening scheme proposed by Craig, but not always followed in operation.
Paul made the point that some screening at the start would eliminate silly and meaningless UFO stats kept by almost every official investigation.
Hi Jan, Yes Paul had a lot of memorable quotes. Certainly screening UFO reports in such a way was sound, but quite often now email exchanges etc help establish if one is potentially dealing with a report of significance. A lot of preliminary information can be more easily transmitted these days if witnesses are able, to assist in preliminary determinations.
ReplyDeleteI noticed in the UK Condign report that much of data that led to the "plasma" hypothesis and other speculations, was based on very slim and relatively scant report forms which quite often were insufficient to make even the most basic of interpretation. That Achilles Heel was sufficient to make one question the validity of the conclusions. Best wishes, Bill
Hi Jan, Yes Paul had a lot of memorable quotes. Certainly screening UFO reports in such a way was sound, but quite often now email exchanges etc help establish if one is potentially dealing with a report of significance. A lot of preliminary information can be more easily transmitted these days if witnesses are able, to assist in preliminary determinations.
ReplyDeleteI noticed in the UK Condign report that much of data that led to the "plasma" hypothesis and other speculations, was based on very slim and relatively scant report forms which quite often were insufficient to make even the most basic of interpretation. That Achilles Heel was sufficient to make one question the validity of the conclusions. Best wishes, Bill
The Knowles family incident is the most exciting UFO case in Australia and I am very surprised that no UFO researchers have ever come close to solving this case. I read the Ozfiles story which was very beautifully written but I was a bit disappointed with the conclusion. By all accounts the craft that attacked the family, and they all believe it was a craft, was about the size of a station wagon, or a car towing a caravan or trailer, it hovered, it had a powerful searchlight, it spewed out carbon soot and hot exhaust fumes from its engines, made a high pitched humming electrical noise and a vroom vroom noise. Sounds like a helicopter to me. Mrs Knowles said she reached onto the roof and touched something that felt soft, spongey, rubbery like some sort of suction pad and her hand and arm were burnt and she needed treatment for those burns. A truck driver at the Mundrabilla roadhouse looked over the car that night and said the car smelt like it had blown a fuse. He also said that the car was covered with soot and there were four dents on the roof and it looked as if the car was picked up by a magnet, maybe it was. The family all say something landed on the roof with a metallic thump and the weight of this heavy object was pushing the car down. They say their hair stood on end, maybe that was because of the static electricity from the electromagnet. They were being chased at over 100kmph but the object picked up the car and it began swinging violently from side to side, the driver looked at the speedo at it was recording the top speed of 200kmph. Maybe that was because his foot was on the accelerator and the front wheels were free wheeling with no road resistance, what do you think. Forensic examination of the dust in the car found it was potassium chlorate an explosive compound used be terrorists to build improvised explosive devises and a NASA related lab found a trace of astatine which should only be involved in nuclear science. The Knowles family say that when they were out of the car after they were dropped back onto the road by the object they were covered in this material and the car inside and out was covered in it as well, so I believe these chemicals came from the craft. The police in Ceduna said the material in the car looked like the residue found in car exhaust pipes or maybe helicopter exhaust pipes. Many people relied on your evidence and report to come up with an answer to this incident but in my view evidence relating to the forensic reports and eye witness accounts should be re-examined. The family tried to warn others about there encounter and were accused of being liars and frauds and of creating a hoax for profit, they even had the insurance claim on their car rejected and that does not seem fair.
ReplyDelete