Thursday, February 2, 2012

Ufo Sightings In Canary Islands

Posted by Unknown On 8:59 AM
Ufo Sightings In Canary Islands
To the same degree we've scruffy on Paul Kimball for his filmed list of the best UFO sightings always, we came across a list by ahead flying saucer "nimble-fingered" William Spaulding, who provided his position on some top UFO sightings and happenings for The Popular Almanac's The Regard of Lists #2 by author Irving Wallace and group [William Morrow and Division, NY, 1980, Pane 417 ff.].

His first portray was the McMinnville/Trent photos which we think as facade.

His adjoining sighting was the 1952 Nash-Fortenberry Pan-Am encounter, over Norfolk, Virginia.

The third knock was the 1952 Washington D.C. incidents.

The fourth unpleasant incident was the Ralph Mayher [sic] film of 1952.

Fifth was (another) 1952 radar/visual sighting of a USAF B-29 run through stretch over the Weakness of Mexico

Six on Spaulding's list was the Kimball/Sparks B-47 incident, so expound is some accord that the sighting was and is important.

Seventh in Spaulding list of eight is a November 1957 on the boundary of Levelland, Texas where on earth witnesses had encounters moreover a huge UFO.

And eighth on Spaulding's list was the 1976 Iranian encounter.

We won't improve on Spaulding's list, as we see lists as anxiety plausibly than edifying information.

But we past performance that Kimball and Sparks are not the definite UFO aficionados to see the RB-47 panorama as a important UFO encounter.

Anew, the RB-47 sighting is original, but so are dozens of other sightings, with the B-29 sighting (issue forth five, aloof) which has as countless or trimming technical accoutrements as the RB-47 incident.

UFO hobbyists, every person, have their favorite UFO sightings or stories - mine restrain the 1966 Ann Arbor/Dexter/Hillsdale sightings; the seedy "flood gas" sightings.

But have any of these classic sightings detail us a impression to the UFO enigma? Nope. So knock them is a empty, insensible taste, that passes for research for some "ufologists" but they are fun to entry, right?
Categories: , ,

0 comments:

Post a Comment

  • Esoteric Books