Directed by Francis Ridge, the Multiple Anomaly Detection & Automated Recording (MADAR) Project initially studied UFOs in the states of Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. Participants in the MADAR-I (1970-1992) project included the UFO Filter Center and SKYNET. MADAR-II (2014-2016) added a magnetometer, geiger counter, and several cameras, making the device very expensive. ARUFON assisted in the creation of MADAR-III at a lower price point and added “phone-home” capabilities so that a global data map could be created.
Preliminary data strongly suggests a connection between magnetic/electromagnetic anomalies and genuine UFO events. The purpose of the project was two-fold:
The NICAP UFO EVIDENCE (1964) lists 106 instances which are included in the Group 3 or Category 3 list, of UFOs apparently producing “electromagnetic effects”. E-M Effects are those which disrupt electrical circuits, cause engine failure in automobiles, produce radio interference, etc. Included in the E-M category are reports of compass needle deviations. See also, the Cartwright UFO Detector.
All but two years of the operational period involved monitoring at a single isolated area, at Mt. Vernon, Indiana. The site was located in an area north of the city, isolated from disturbance sources, save lightning, and earthquakes, and …UFOs.
Concentrating research to a category, the MADAR Project was designed to demonstrate that UFOs were not only witnessed by reliable observers, but also by electronic devices which cannot hallucinate. The purpose in having a UFO detection system was two-fold: