Lockheed Martin (Martin Marietta has facilities in Waterton Canyon in the foothills southwest of Denver, Colorado) has been a major developer of "technology" for many space programs.
One of those being re-entry vehicles which could survive descent and not burn up.
(this is barring ALL the exotic technologies, but assuming that ONLY conventional drives, and re-entry methods would be available) - going off into exotic drives, space-warps, time travel/anti-gravity is not the subject of this thread but to look at some historical information.
Kecksburg, PA - strange object falls out of the sky, but makes several intelligent turns indicating something is navigating it.
Keywords - GE Mark II re-entry vehicle..
In the PDF here-in look midway for pictures of the Mark 2 and the Mark 12.. Assuming then the numbers were sequential, probably 4-11 were either failures or are so classified that pictures of them cannot be posted by the government contractor.. (Mk-3 will be shown below)
from this article:
http://www.post-gazette.com/news/sci...s/201512060146
In the article it is discussed that it very well could be the GE Mark 2 re-entry vehicle which failed. The airforce was wanting a better way to spy on Soviet Union, and this craft was part of a satellite system to do just that.. The payload was brought back with a working nuclear power source, which launching nuclear device in space at that time was NOT talked about.It was 4:47 p.m. when it came out of the sky from the northwest, a flaming object from over Canada, Ohio and into Western Pennsylvania. It appeared to be guided, changing its path and making a level descent away from residential areas and into the woods of Kecksburg.
The first people on the scene said it was partly buried in the ground. It was made of metal, between 10 and 12 feet long, and generally shaped like an acorn. There were strange markings on a band near the bottom that resembled hieroglyphics.
The military was on the remote scene within an hour and by 8 p.m., it was gone, hauled away on the back of an Army flatbed truck.
John Ventre, state director of the Mutual UFO Network, did not begin earnestly looking into the Kecksburg mystery until this year, he said, because so many others already were on the case. But Shafton native Owen Eichler, who had spent decades investigating it, came to him in February with a theory and some evidence that seemed to add up, and the two joined forces.
Their research — put forth in a report with the title “Has a Top 5 UFO Case Been Solved?” — suggests the vehicle was launched from Johnston Island in the Pacific two days earlier as part of America’s top-secret program for spying on the Soviet Union from space.
“Of course, no one ever wanted to admit we were spying on Russia,” Mr. Ventre said, offering an explanation as to why the object was taken away and never explained.
The secrecy to recover the powerpack radiation source, and the vehicle would have been necessary to cover-up the spying activity, and the use of nuclear devices in space.





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