In addition to the two primary theories/stories of the
Roswell crash (alien flying saucer; weather balloon), some other theories
have been put forth over the years, including:
1. What was found may have been a captured, German-built
V-2 unguided ballistic missile known to have been test-fired from the
White Sands proving ground, less than a hundred miles southwest of Corona,
New Mexico. This might account for the finding of unfamiliar parts.
As for the bodies that were found some distance from the debris field,
some proponents of the rocket explanation suggest they were nothing
more exotic than monkeys that had been lofted into near-space as part
of a biological test program that would eventually lead to manned space
flight.
2. From November 1944, through April 1945, the Japanese
launched more than nine thousand crude, gas-filled balloons, each carrying
fifty to seventy-five pounds of incendiary or high-explosive bombs.
As many as a thousand of them may have ridden the prevailing winds all
they way to North America. One of these may have crashed at Roswell.
While some of these balloons actually did make it to
America, starting several fires and killing six Americans, it is unlikely
that a balloon from Japan stayed aloft for two years before crashing
in Roswell, 1947, since the last Japanese balloon launch was in 1945.
3. There is always the possibility that what crashed
on the Foster ranch and even at the plains of San Agustin, was connected
to the test flight of a secret American airplane or missile. At any
one time, various secret vehicles are being tested in the wide open
spaces of the West where the chances of their being seen accidentally
are at a minimum. This was true in 1947 and it is certainly true today.
4. Some people believe that what crashed at Roswell
was a secret Soviet weapon. This was probably a reasonable theory in
1947, when the U.S. government was concerned that the Soviets might
have leaped far ahead of America using captured Nazi German technology
and scientists. Today, however, based on our thorough knowledge of early
Soviet jet airplanes and rockets, this theory doesn't seem to hold water.