ID | #1562343257 |
Добавлен | пт, 05/07/2019 |
Автор | July N. |
Источники | |
Феномены | |
Состояние | Исследование
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Исходная информация
Возле станции RCAF в Торбее (ныне международный аэропорт Сент-Джонс) был замечен «исчезающий объект в океанском прибое». 22 июня 1955 года в море был замечен объект, о котором сообщили на базу. Там не было никаких подтверждающих свидетелей.
Проведенное расследование показало, что в то время в этом районе не было американских, канадских или британских подводных лодок. Другими словами, это был официальный отчет о USO (Неопознанный Подводный Объект).
Оригинальная новость
Date: June 22 1955
Location: RCAF Station at Torbay (now the St. John’s International Airport). This would place it on the easternmost point of North America, at about -52 West longitude, and closer to England than Brandon, Manitoba, Canada, which is near the middle of Canada.
Time:
Summary: Anyway, sometime of June 22, 1955, an object was seen at sea, and was reported to the RCAF base at Torbay. There were no corroborating witnesses. What investigation that was done only revealed that there were no American, Canadian, or British submarines in the area at the time. In other words, this was an official report of an USO (Unidentified Submarine Object).
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Still plugging away at the National Archives' collection of Canadian UFO docs, I came across this curiosity. It stood alone, without any additional accompanying information.
It seems that something described only as a "disappearing object on ocean surf" was seen near the RCAF Station at Torbay (now the St. John's International Airport). This would place it on the easternmost point of North America, at about -52 West longitude, and closer to England than Brandon, Manitoba, Canada, which is near the middle of Canada.
Anyway, sometime of June 22, 1955, an object was seen at sea, and was reported to the RCAF base at Torbay. There were no corroborating witnesses.
What investigation that was done only revealed that there were no American, Canadian, or British submarines in the area at the time.
In other words, this was an official report of an USO (Unidentified Submarine Object).
Only 12 years later, the infamous Shag Harbour UFO would plunge into the ocean off the coast of Nova Scotia, resulting in the Canadian Navy's underwater search for an unidentified object.
Гипотезы
Расследование
Итог
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