THE ARCHIVES

Welcome to the Nebula Coffee Archives, a curated collection of UFO sightings, declassified reports, and cosmic mysteries that fuel late-night conversations. From government disclosures to eyewitness encounters, this space is dedicated to exploring the unexplained and preserving the stories that keep us looking to the skies. Pour a fresh cup, dive in, and discover the truths hidden in plain sight.

[ Disclaimer: This intro video was created for entertainment purposes only and should not be considered factual evidence ]

USS Nimitz “Tic Tac” UFO Encounter (2004)

In November 2004, the USS Nimitz Carrier Strike Group was conducting training exercises off the coast of Southern California when radar operators aboard the USS Princeton began detecting strange aerial objects. These “contacts” appeared to drop from 80,000 feet to sea level in a matter of seconds, movements far beyond any known aircraft.

On November 14, Navy pilots Cmdr. David Fravor and Lt. Cmdr. Alex Dietrich were dispatched to investigate. What they encountered would become one of the most credible UFO cases in modern history.

Fravor described seeing a smooth, white, wingless object shaped like a Tic Tac hovering above the ocean. As his jet descended, the object mirrored his maneuvers before shooting off with unmatched speed and acceleration, vanishing in moments.

Later, another Navy pilot, Lt. Cmdr. Chad Underwood, captured infrared footage (FLIR) of the object — the now-famous video that shows the “Tic Tac” locked in the jet’s targeting system.

The footage was eventually released by the U.S. Department of Defense and confirmed by the U.S. Navy as authentic, though still officially “unidentified.”

[ Video courtesy of the U.S. Department of Defense / U.S. Navy. ]

Hellfire Missile vs UFO ORB (2024 Yemen)

In late October 2024, startling footage surfaced during a U.S. congressional UFO hearing. The video, introduced by Rep. Eric Burlison, showed what appeared to be a U.S. Hellfire missile launched from a Reaper drone striking an unidentified orb-like object over the waters off Yemen.

Rather than being destroyed, the orb seemed to absorb or deflect the impact, remaining intact after what should have been a devastating strike. Hellfire missiles are designed to obliterate armored vehicles on impact, making the footage deeply puzzling to both lawmakers and analysts.

[ Video Courtesy of U.S. Congress / media pool. ]

“Flying Saucer"— National Archives (1964)

On June 4, 1964, a striking photograph labeled simply “Flying Saucer” was preserved within the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center’s photographic records. Today, it is held by the U.S. National Archives under

The origins of this photograph are debated. Some UFO historians connect it to Paul Villa, a New Mexico man in the early 1960s who claimed contact with extraterrestrials and produced several daylight UFO photographs. Villa insisted he was guided telepathically to capture the images, while skeptics argue the craft resembles hubcaps or automotive parts suspended on a line.

Though widely considered dubious by debunkers, the image’s survival in an official NASA/National Archives collection gave it an aura of credibility. To believers, it demonstrates that even during the height of the space race, government agencies were quietly cataloging UFO imagery alongside legitimate scientific photography.

[ PHOTO COURTESY OF NATIONAL ARCHIVES ]

National Archives Identifier: 303938034
Local Identifier: 255-GS-65-108

Records Related to Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) and Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs) at the National Archives: Photographs | National Archives

Project Blue Book:

UFO Investigations (1952–1969)

Project Blue Book was the U.S. Air Force’s official program to investigate Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs), active from 1952 to 1969 at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. Over 12,000 reports from civilians, pilots, and military personnel were reviewed during a peak era of sightings.

Blue Book was the third Air Force UFO study (after Project Sign in 1947 and Project Grudge in 1949). Its mission: (1) assess whether UFOs posed a threat to national security, and (2) scientifically analyze the data.

Led by Captain Edward J. Ruppelt, the project found about 90% of cases could be explained as stars, weather balloons, aircraft, or atmospheric effects. But 701 reports remained “unidentified.” Notable cases include the 1952 Washington, D.C. radar-visual incident and the 1964 Lonnie Zamora encounter in Socorro, New Mexico.

In 1969, following the Condon Report—which concluded UFOs offered no evidence of advanced technology or extraterrestrial origin—Blue Book was shut down. The Air Force declared UFOs posed no threat, revealed no alien craft, and displayed no unknown technology. Critics, however, argue that credible cases were downplayed and that secrecy continued beyond the project’s official closure.

READ COMPLETE REPORT AT:

Project_Blue_Book,_complete_status_reports.pdf

According to long-standing reports and leaked documents, the group allegedly oversaw recovery operations, scientific analysis, and information control related to unidentified aerial phenomena. Though official confirmation has never been produced, the Majestic 12 legend remains one of the most persistent elements in UFO research.

In December 1984, researcher Jaime Shandera received an anonymous package at his home in North Hollywood, California. Postmarked Albuquerque, New Mexico, the envelope contained a roll of 35 mm film. When developed, it revealed eight pages of what appeared to be a classified briefing paper dated November 18, 1952, in which Vice Adm. Roscoe Hillenkoetter purportedly informed President-elect Dwight D. Eisenhower of the recovery of two crashed spacecraft.

The document also claimed that in early July 1947, authorities had retrieved the remains of four humanoid beings from one of the crash sites. The papers further alleged that President Harry S. Truman had authorized the creation of a super-secret panel, designated “Majestic 12,” to study the recovered material.

Despite repeated denials and a lack of conclusive evidence, Majestic 12 continues to occupy a central place in discussions of government secrecy surrounding unidentified aerial phenomena.

In 1988, two FBI field offices received copies of a memo titled “Operation Majestic-12,” claiming to be a highly classified government document. The memo appeared to brief President Eisenhower on a secret committee created to exploit the recovery of an extraterrestrial aircraft and to conceal the effort from public examination. An Air Force investigation later determined the document to be a forgery.

------------------------------------------------( LINK BELOW WILL TAKE DIRECT TO FBI WEBSITE! )--------------------------------------------------

View Allegedly Debunked File Here: FBI Records: The Vault — Majestic 12 Part 01 (Final)

Men In Black (G-Men) 1947-Present

Reports of mysterious individuals known as the Men in Black (also referred to as MIB or G-Men) have circulated since the earliest years of the modern UFO era. Witnesses describe them as somber men wearing dark suits, arriving unannounced after UFO sightings to question, intimidate, or silence those who claim to have seen unidentified aerial phenomena.

The first widely documented case dates to 1947, when Harold Dahl reported that a black-clad man warned him to remain silent about an encounter over Maury Island, Washington. Researcher Albert Bender later claimed in 1953 that three Men in Black visited him after he began publishing details of UFO activity—an event that inspired decades of speculation about covert suppression.

Descriptions of the MIB vary: human yet emotionless, their behavior mechanical, their speech formal and detached. Some theories propose they were intelligence operatives enforcing secrecy; others suggest non-human entities adopting human form to control information flow.

Through the 1960s and 1970s, sightings of Men in Black were reported worldwide, often following close-encounter incidents. Declassified intelligence files reveal no official organization by that name, but the phenomenon endures in UFO research as a symbol of institutional concealment and psychological control.

While popular culture later reimagined them as cinematic heroes, the real-world legend of the Men in Black persists as one of the most unsettling and enduring aspects of UFO mythology.