Public records first
Records link back to government archives, agency pages, public reports, or source-backed catalog records wherever available.
Official-source UFO archive
Search public government UFO files and official UAP metadata with source links, record families, archive context, and careful labels that do not turn every record into an alien claim.
Source-backed discovery
AlienCatalog.com brings together official-source metadata from public archives, agency releases, government reports, and research datasets so researchers and general readers can move from a search result back to the originating source.
Records link back to government archives, agency pages, public reports, or source-backed catalog records wherever available.
Official UAP imagery, historical UFO files, drone reports, archival objects, and research theme items stay clearly labeled.
Search by source, title, year, media availability, record family, status, and source context.
A record can document a report or archive item without proving extraterrestrial activity.
Official source map
Government UFO files are not one single archive. They appear across military history files, public-records releases, official UAP case pages, national archives, aviation datasets, and international agencies. AlienCatalog keeps these source families separate so a historical UFO case file is not confused with a modern UAP imagery page or a drone report.
Key public sources include AARO case pages, ODNI annual UAP reports, FBI Vault UFO files, National Archives UAP metadata, and Project Blue Book-related archive records.
National Archives records can include file units, item metadata, scans, PDFs, and digital objects. These are useful for discovery, but they should not all be counted as separate events.
France, the United Kingdom, and Canada maintain public UFO/UAP-related source material with different terminology, classification systems, and access rules.
AlienCatalog should be read as a source-linked search and research index. Some entries are source records, some are media objects, and some are derived research-index entries.
Research FAQ
No. AlienCatalog.com is an independent public research catalog that links to official and public sources where available.
No. A catalog record may document a report, source page, media item, dataset row, or derived research entry. It is not proof of any specific explanation.
Many public datasets point multiple rows to the same collection page, spreadsheet, PDF index, or archive landing page. Shared URL does not automatically mean duplicate.
Use the title, source agency, record date where available, AlienCatalog page or search result, and the original source URL.
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