World Trade Center destruction paper and response On September 22, 2005, at a BYU seminar attended by around 60 people, Jones publicly presented his views regarding the 2001
collapse of the World Trade Center towers and
7 World Trade Center during the
September 11 attacks. Jones noted he believed it was more likely a
controlled demolition, using
thermite, referencing the speed and symmetry of the collapses, and characteristics of dust jets. Later, Jones said he had identified grey-red flakes found in the dust as nanothermite traces and that the thermite reaction products (
aluminium oxide and iron-rich microspheres) were also found in the dust. Shortly after the seminar, Jones placed a research paper entitled "Why Indeed Did the WTC Buildings Collapse?" on his page in the Physics department Web site, commenting that BYU had no responsibility for the paper. The paper was self-published in the online
Journal of 9/11 Studies, a journal co-founded and co-edited by Jones. It also appeared in a volume of essays,
9/11 and American Empire: Intellectuals Speak Out, edited by
David Ray Griffin and
Peter Dale Scott. It was controversial both for its content and its claims to scientific rigor. shortly after he made his views public, the BYU College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences and the faculty of structural engineering issued statements in which they distanced themselves from Jones' work. They noted that Jones' "hypotheses and interpretations of evidence were being questioned by scholars and practitioners," and expressed doubts on whether they had been "submitted to relevant scientific venues that would ensure rigorous technical peer review." Over the following year, Jones presented his WTC research in lectures at
Idaho State University,
Utah Valley State College, University of Colorado at Boulder and University of Denver, University of California at Berkeley and Davis, and the University of Texas at Austin.
Retirement from BYU On September 7, 2006, Jones removed his paper from BYU's website at the request of administrators and was placed on paid leave. The university cited its concern about the "increasingly speculative and accusatory nature" of Jones' work and that perhaps Jones' research had "not been published in appropriate scientific venues" as reasons for putting him under review. Six weeks later he chose to retire, and the review was not pursued further. and Project Censored listed his 9/11 research among the top mainstream media censored stories of 2007. His placement on paid leave drew criticism from the
American Association of University Professors and the
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. Both organizations have long been critics of BYU's record on academic freedom.
Subsequent papers Jones was later interviewed by mainstream news sources and made public appearances. He urged caution in drawing conclusions. His name was often mentioned in reporting about
9/11 conspiracy theories. In August 2008, Jones, along with Kevin Ryan and James Gourley, published a peer-reviewed article in
The Environmentalist, titled, 'Environmental anomalies at the World Trade Center: Evidence for energetic materials'. In April 2009, Jones co-authored a paper in
The Open Chemical Physics Journal, titled, 'Active Thermitic Material Discovered in Dust from the 9/11 World Trade Center Catastrophe'. The editor of the journal, Professor
Marie-Paule Pileni, an expert in explosives and nano-technology, resigned. She received an e-mail from the Danish science journal
Videnskab asking for her professional assessment of the article's content. According to Pileni, the article was published without her authorization. Subsequently, numerous concerns arose regarding the reliability of the publisher,
Bentham Science Publishers. This included the publishing an allegedly peer reviewed article generated by
SCIgen (although this program has also successfully submitted papers to
IEEE and
Springer), the resignation of multiple people at the administrative level, and soliciting article submissions from researchers in unrelated fields through spam.
Europhysics News, in August 2016, published a feature "15 Years Later: On the Physics of High-rise Building Collapses," which strongly challenges the official U.S. Government (
NIST) narrative of the collapse of WTC7 and the WTC Towers, including a disclaimer about the speculative and not peer reviewed status of the article. The paper was authored by Steven Jones, Robert Korol, Anthony Szamboti and Ted Walter.
Scholars, Architects, and Engineers for 9/11 Truth In December 2005, Jones was a founding member of
Scholars for 9/11 Truth. In 2006, most of its members left that organization to establish
Scholars for 9/11 Truth & Justice. Also in 2006, Jones became a founding member of
Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth, and an editor of the
Journal of 9/11 Studies. ==Recognition and awards==