f43fdc6af9dab372

28952690.pdf

NARA·NARA_PBB_597821_pdfs-2·pdf·18.4 MB·4 pages

Scores

1.2
Document value
0.0
Cross-references
2.0
Provenance
3.3
Info density
0.0
Topic relevance
0.5
Anomalousness

OCR'd text preview (4 of 4 pages)

Source: mistral_ocr · confidence ~95%

page 1
|  1. DATE - TIME GROUP | 2. LOCATION  |
| --- | --- |
|  21 Jun 53 21/1300Z | EAU Galle, Florida  |
|  3. SOURCE Civilian | 10. CONCLUSION INSUFFICIENT DATA FOR EVALUATION  |
|  4. NUMBER OF OBJECTS Three | Insufficient Data  |
|  5. LENGTH OF OBSERVATION 3 Seconds | 11. BRIEF SUMMARY AND ANALYSIS Three oval-shaped white objects approx 6' in diameter, 6-12" in thickness traveled at an estimated altitude of 30'.  |
|  6. TYPE OF OBSERVATION Ground Visual |   |
|  7. COURSE East |   |
|  8. PHOTOS ☐ Yes ☑ No |   |
|  9. PHYSICAL EVIDENCE ☐ Yes ☑ No |   |

FORM
FTD SEP 63 0-329 (TDE) Previous ed
page 2
UNCLASSIFIED
Eau Callie, Florida
21 January 1953

I. Description of Incident
At 1300 3 an unidentified source sighted three oval shaped, white objects six feet in diameter traveling in an unspecified direction at an estimated altitude of thirty feet.

II. Discussion of Incident
The report is exceedingly brief.

III. Conclusion
Insufficient data for analysis.

DOWNGRADED AT 3 YEAR INTERVALS; DECLASSIFIED AFTER 12 YEARS. DOD DIR 5200.10

T53-3695
43
UNCLASSIFIED
page 3
38

AH
PR
VE

31/0800Z
EAU GALLER, FLA

1. Atia
2. Atia
3. Cyfles
4. Ale

1. Atia
2. Atia
3. Cyfles
4. Ale

0
NPF878
YDC124
WYC247
VDD217
JESPT 172
OPOP JEPHQ JEDWP JEDEN JEPYB 444
DE JESPT 88
OP 212888Z
FH CG AFNTC PATRICK AFB FLA
TO JEPHQ/DIRECTOR OF INTELLIGENCE WASHDC
JEDWP/AIR TECHNICAL INTELLIGENCE CENTER WRIGHT-PATTERSON AFB OHIO
JEDEN/CG ENT AFB COLORADO SPRINGS COLORADO
JEPYB/CG ARDC BALTO MD
/MTK-1-2824 ATTN ATIAA-2C FLYOBRPT THREE OVAL SHAPES SIGHTED ZERO EIGHT ZERO ZERO HRS E ON TWO ONE JAN PD APRX SIX FEET IN DIAM AND SIX IN TO A FOOT IN THICKNESS PD SNOW WHITE IN COLOR PD NO PRPL
page 4
INFO SENT
62 JAN 63
N. PACIFIC

Hydrographic Bulletin

NORTH PACIFIC

A cooperating observer reports that on January 22, 1953, at 0827 G. M. T., in lat. 14°09' N., lon. 158°50' E., a meteor was observed low in the southeasterly sky, approximately 5° below Adkara in the constellation Canis Major. As it progressed across the eastern sky, the meteor remained almost parallel to the horizon and was at first mistaken for an aircraft due to its parallel flight. The phenomenon remained visible for 27 seconds and then disappeared below Capella after traversing roughly 50° of arc.

Weather clear with oc

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