Added | Tue, 12/12/2017 |
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In September 1967, the six "flying saucers" was discovered between the mouth of the Thames and the Bristol channel in the South of England.
One of six shiny metal discs were found on 4 September 1967 on the Isle of Sheppey, Ray Seger, who played with his friends nearby. They called the cops. The representatives of the law were frightened by the discovery of not fewer children.
Another disk was found in Berkshire. Unlike the first, found object oozed and hissed. It was probably filled with some fluid.
As it turned out, the hoax was performed by pupils of the Royal school of aviation at Farnborough. The deception was part of Rag Week (annual event to raise funds for charity). The whole point of the hoax was to be taken seriously as engineers Rog Palmer and Chris Southall, who supervised the project, thought it was the best idea in the era of space exploration.
The disciples tried to do everything very convincing. They decided that antennas, portholes and other attributes of the earth of all cars on the "alien ship" should not be, and his appearance must be unusual and unrecognizable.
First, using the plaster mold, they made the plates out of fiberglass with a metallic coating, and then soldered them together, setting inside the electronic sound equipment (it should hum).
"Saucers" were also filled with flour and water mixture, which was sveshivalis and wandered inside, turning into a dirty and smelly slime.
All the "plates" were placed in six locations in a straight line from East to West: in queenborough on the Isle of Sheppey, in Bromley, South London, in Ascot, in the village of Ufford, near Newbury, in Berkshire, in Chippenham in Wiltshire and Clevedon in Somerset.
Recognition of students in the hoax did not immediately believe, and the media had printed discourse on the subject of alien invasion.
Interestingly, amid reports about these "plates" the Ministry of defence received almost daily reports about UFO sightings over England. So the hoax has generated mass hysteria.
Translated by «Yandex.Translator»
In September 1967, six flying saucers were discovered between the Thames Estuary and the Bristol Channel in the south of England. This hoax was carried out by students of the Royal Aviation School in Farnborough. The deception was part of Rag Week (annual fundraising events for charity). The whole point of the hoax was to be taken seriously, because engineers Rog Palmer and Chris Southall, who oversaw the project, considered it the best idea in the era of space exploration.
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