SUBJECT: THE HILL ABDUCTION CASE                             FILE: UFO2710



PART 9




   ----------------------------------------------------------------------

   IS THE FISH INTERPRETATION UNIQUE?

   By Robert Sheaffer

     The  story  of  Marjorie  Fish's attempts  at  identifying  the  star
   patterns  sketched  by  Betty  Hill  was told  in  "The  Zeta  Reticuli
   Incident" by Terence Dickinson in the December 1974 issue. This pattern
   of  solar type stars unquestionably bears a striking resemblance to the
   map that Betty Hill says she saw while she was being examined aboard  a
   flying saucer.  But how significant is this resemblance?  Is there only
   one pattern of stars which will match the sketch convincingly?

     Betty Hill herself discovered an impressive resemblance in a star map
   published  in the New York Times.  In 1965  a  map of the stars of  the
   constellation  Pegasus  appeared in that newspaper,   accompanying  the
   announcement  by a Russian radio astronomer (Comrade Sholomitsky)   the
   radio  source  CTA-102,   depicted  in the map,   may  be  sending  out
   intelligent radio signals.  Intrigued by this remarkable claim,   Betty
   Hill  studied the map,  and added the corresponding star names  to  her
   sketch.  As you can see, the Pegasus map --  while not exactly like the
   sketch --  is impressively similar.  If CTA-102  --  appearing near the
   "globes"   in her sketch --  was in reality an artificial radio source,
   that would give the Pegasus map much additional credibility.

     However,  the case for the artificial origin of quasar CTA-102   soon
   fell  flat.   Other scientists were unable to  observe  these  reported
   strange variations which had caused Sholomitsky to suggest that CTA-102
   might be pulsing intelligently.

     In 1966,  when Marjorie Fish was just beginning her work,  Charles W.
   Atterberg (employed by an aeronautical communications firm in Illinois)
   also set out to attempt to identify this star pattern.

     "I began my search by perusing a star atlas I had on hand," Atterberg
   explained.   "I  soon  realized that this was a  pointless  and  futile
   project."   Any  star pattern useful for interstellar  navigation,   he
   reasoned, would not be Earth-centered as are the familiar constellation
   figures. Thus Atterberg began to look in three dimensions for a pattern
   of stars that would approximate the Hill sketch.

     Working  from a list of the nearest stars,  Atterberg "began plotting
   these stars as they would be seen from various directions.  I  did this
   by drawing the celestial position of a star,  I  would draw a  straight
   line penetrating the sphere at a known position, and measure out to the
   distance of the star...It at first took me hours to plot this out  from
   any one particular direction."

     When plotting the stars as seen from a position indefinitely far away
   on the celestial equator at 17 hours right ascension, Atterberg found a
   pattern  of stars conspicuously similar to the Hill sketch.  After much
   work he refined this position to 17 hours 30 minutes right ascension, -
   10   degrees declination.  The resulting map resembles the Hill  sketch
   even  more strongly than does the Fish map,  and it contains a  greater
   number  of  stars.   Furthermore,  all of the  stars  depicted  in  the
   Atterberg  map  lie within 18.2  light-years of the sun.  The Fish  map
   reaches out 53 light-years, where our knowledge of stellar distances is
   much less certain.

     Carl Sagan states in Intelligent Life in the Universe that, excluding
   multiple star systems, "the three nearest stars of potential biological
   interest are Epsilon Eridani,  Epsilon Indi and Tau Ceti."  These three
   stars from the heart of the Atterberg map,  defining the two spheres in
   the  very center of the heavy lines that supposedly represent the major
   "trade routes" of the "UFOnauts". Epsilon Eridani and Tau Ceti were the
   two stars listened to by Project Ozma,  the pioneering radio search for
   intelligent civilization in space.

     Other heavy lines connect the spheres with the sun, which we know has
   at least one habitable planet.  Thinner lines,  supposedly representing
   places  visited  less  frequently,   connect  with  Groombridge   1618,
   Groombridge 34,  61  Cygni and Sigma Draconis,  which are designated as
   stars  "that could have habitable planets"  in Stephen H.  Dole's  Rand
   Corporation  study,  Habitable Planets for Man.  Of the 11  stars  (not
   counting the sun) that have allegedly been visited by the aliens, seven
   of them appear  on Dole's list.  Three of the four  stars which are not
   included are stopping points on the trip to Sigma Draconis,  which Dole
   considered  to  have  even better prospects  than  Epsilon  Eridani  or
   Epsilon Indi for harboring a habitable planet.

     Another  remarkable aspect of the Atterberg map is the fact that  its
   orientation, unlike the Fish map, is not purely arbitrary. Gould's belt
   --   a   concentration  of the sky's brightest  stars  --   is  exactly
   perpendicular  to the plane of the Atterberg map.  Furthermore,  it  is
   vertical in orientation;  it does not cut obliquely across the map, but
   runs exactly up and down. A third curious coincidence: The southpole of
   the Atterberg map points toward the brightest part of  Gould's belt, in
   the  constellation  Carina.  The bright stars comprising  Gould's  belt
   might  well  serve  as  a  useful  reference  frame  for   interstellar
   travelers,   and  it  is  quite  plausible  that  they  might  base   a
   navigational coordinate system upon it.

     No  other map interpreting the Hill sketch offers any  rationale  for
   its choice of perspectives.  The problem with trying to interpret Betty
   Hill's sketch is that it simply fits too many star patterns. Three such
   patterns   have   been  documented  to  date.   How  many  more   exist
   undiscovered?

     Robert Sheaffer is a computer systems programmer currently working at
   NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD.




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