1f0d4f751c4de934

28967231.pdf

NARA·NARA_PBB_597821_pdfs-2·pdf·15.2 MB·2 pages

Scores

1.2
Document value
0.0
Cross-references
2.0
Provenance
3.7
Info density
0.0
Topic relevance
0.0
Anomalousness

OCR'd text preview (2 of 2 pages)

Source: mistral_ocr · confidence ~95%

page 1
|  1. DATE | 2. LOCATION | 12. CONCLUSIONS  |
| --- | --- | --- |
|  29 August 1956 | Pueblo, Colorado | ☐ Was Balloon ☐ Probably Balloon ☐ Possibly Balloon  |
|  3. DATE-TIME GROUP Local GMT 30/0330Z | 4. TYPE OF OBSERVATION ☑ Ground-Visual ☐ Ground-Radar ☐ Air-Visual ☐ Air-Intercept Radar | ☐ Was Aircraft ☐ Probably Aircraft ☐ Possibly Aircraft  |
|  5. PHOTOS ☐ Yes ☑ No | 6. SOURCE Military | ☑ Was Astronomical Mars ☐ Probably Astronomical ☐ Possibly Astronomical  |
|  7. LENGTH OF OBSERVATION two hrs & 21 minutes | 8. NUMBER OF OBJECTS one | 9. COURSE SE  |
|  10. BRIEF SUMMARY OF SIGHTING
page 2
Case 200, Ft. Collins and Loveland, Colo., Aug. 24, 26, 27, 29, 1956—Nothing timid about the Denver Post headlines which prefaced a day-by-day account of the activities of a UFO seen over Northern Colorado. The mystery object not only caused the telephone switchboards of the police department and newspapers to be swamped with calls but caused embarrassment to the experts who tried to explain it away. Most observers agreed that the object was round and "intensely red." One of the witnesses, and a reporter for radio station KCOL, said the object glowed bright red in the center, diminishing in in

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