CORONA — They say something crashed out here in the desert.

Something weird, maybe something from another planet. Definitely something the U.S. government has never fully explained.

When it happened, 75 years ago this summer, many called it a flying disc or flying saucer. Today, the sometimes-rocky plain about 25 miles southeast of Corona looks like any other piece of New Mexico desert — desolate, uninhabited, untouched by man or machine.

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Mary Seely, a volunteer who helps run the Corona Museum of Frontier Life, says it has no artifacts from the area’s legendary UFO crash — and locals ‘like it that way.’

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The general area off Transwestern Road, southeast of Corona, where the Roswell Incident is said to have happened. 

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Charlotte Boyce-Beene, 11, takes a look at one of the exhibits Friday at the UFO Museum in Roswell.

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Rusty and Jenny Block of Carlsbad take a picture of their children at one of the exhibits at the UFO Museum at Roswell.

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Rhonda Oord of Corona talks Thursday about the alien theme of her Corona Motel. The town is mostly absent of hints that it's the original site of the so-called Roswell Incident.



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