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Flying Toblerones, mysterious illnesses and silky-white substances are among hundreds of close encounters described in previously top-secret files released by the Ministry of Defence (MoD) on Wednesday.
More than 6,000 pages of material spanning from 1994 to 2000 holds hundreds of other-worldly experiences with unidentified flying objects (UFOs) and apparent aliens across Britain.
They include reports of hundreds of alleged sightings over Bonnybridge, near Falkirk - as well as a report by a senior air traffic controller at Prestwick Airport, near Ayr.
Aircraft of all shapes and sizes have been witnessed flying over a wide range of locations - including Chelsea Football Club and the former Home Secretary Michael Howard's home in Kent.
This fifth instalment of documents released under a three-year project between the MoD and The National Archives consists of 24 files of sightings, letters and Parliamentary Questions.
They include a request submitted to former Prime Minister John Major from a councillor for an inquiry into 600 alleged sightings in Bonnybridge, Scotland, known as the "Bonnybridge Triangle".
VIDEO: Shocking Footage of UFO
In October 1997, Councillor William Buchanan, of Falkirk District Council, who supported the claim of 600 sightings in two years, wrote to Mr Blair demanding the phenomena were investigated after five years of pursuing the matter.
He wrote: "For five years the people both you and I represent have witnessed a phenomenon in the area that has been left unexplained. UFO over 3,000 people have witnessed, some have photographed, some have videoed, then lights and objects.
"I wrote to your predecessor John Major, I have also contacted our local MP Dennis Canavan who put me in contact with the MoD who told me quite strongly that nothing was happening in Bonnybridge that was a threat to national security."
He went on: "I have tried to get an answer for the people and have been ridiculed for it. I appeal to you Mr Blair to get the phenomenon investigated."
But an MoD response to the letter said there were no grounds to investigate the matter. However, Mr Buchanan did not give up and wrote to Mr Blair once again in 1998 demanding "the truth".
The documents also detail an object travelling at more than 1,000 knots was tracked by a senior air traffic controller from the control tower at Glasgow Prestwick Airport, in Ayrshire, in February 1999.
Meanwhile, another report states that a West Lothian electrician spotted a "Toblerone-shaped" UFO hovering over a field. A sketch of the craft is included in the report.
Experts believe the records highlight how shapes of reported UFOs have changed over the last half-century. This could be explained by representations of UFOs in popular culture - such as TV shows like The X-Files.
Many reports in this latest file describe aircraft as big, black and triangular in shape with lights along the edges, whereas the predominant form in the 1940s to 1950s was saucer or disc-shaped.
The files are available to download for free for a month from the website www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ufos
Originally posted by TimothyMartin
reply to post by TXRabbit
But doesn't her ignorance make her even hotter?
Anyway, what's wrong with being a geek? Means your smarter than the rest of the masses. Doesn't have to mean you watch star-trek and wear a pocket protector...
edited to mention that, on watching the video again, I don't think the newscaster is as hot... was I drunk?
[edit on 19-2-2010 by TimothyMartin]
The UFO allegedly responsible for wrecking a wind turbine could have been a secret unmanned stealth bomber on test flights.
The claim came from Ministry of Defence insiders who reportedly said that a black delta-wing craft called Taranis was making test runs on the coastal bombing ranges at Donna Nook and North Coates in Lincolnshire, near to the site of the damaged turbine.
The Taranis, named after the Celtic god of thunder, is about the same size as a Hawk jet and is equipped with stealth equipment and an 'autonomous' artificial intelligence system.
Mr Pope said: "If a stealth aircraft struck the turbine, it may be made of some material which is itself top secret."
The turbine manufacturer, Germany’s Enercon, is examining some of the broken parts.
“It was not a flying object, ice or extreme wind gusts,” said Henri Joppien, a salesman for Enercon, by phone today. “There is no general defect or manufacturer’s problem. All the rest is speculation.”