Every primary-source finding currently in the index, across every release. Use this view to scan the corpus by accent and source; use the decade pages to read epoch-by-epoch.
60 of 60 findings
From a 747SP at 41,000 feet over Kazakhstan, Captain Ed Rhodes photographed circles, corkscrews and 90-degree turns for forty minutes, then his crew flew under contrails Rhodes pegged at ~100,000 feet, an altitude where ordinary propulsion cannot produce contrails. The embassy forwarded the photos to State, CIA and DIA "for what it may be worth."
→ Tajik 747 Captain Tracks Object Over Kazakhstan
Over eight airborne hours near a US military facility, a senior intelligence official and federal/state aircrews logged FLIR-confirmed orbs that split mid-flight from one to three contacts, recurring 4–5-orb formations flaring sequentially (timed to the minute at 2227, 2228, 2233, 2241, 2249, 2252, 2257), a triangle formation, and a swarm "too numerous to count." The official's closing assessment: the orbs broke off to pursue the responding military aircraft.
→ Senior Intel Official's Multi-Hour Orb Encounter
Three independent two-person federal-agent teams logged the same four UAP types over two evenings: orange "mother" orbs ejecting red sub-orbs (witnessed at least five times), a silent stationary fiery orb AARO later measured at 12–18 meters and 1,050 meters out, a "dark kite" that moved sideways at 15–20 mph without rotating, and a "transparent kite" through which faint stars were visible via NVG, including one moment when an agent's spotlight beam stopped at empty air 50 yards out, then projected normally when re-aimed.
→ Seven Federal Agents, Four UAP Categories, 2023
On December 5, 1965, Frank Borman reported a discrete "bogey" alongside a separate field of "hundreds of little particles" at an estimated four miles. Jim Lovell described the same target as "a brilliant body in the sun against a black background with trillions of particles on it." The document carries a contemporaneous handwritten annotation in the upper-right corner: "UFO Sighting by Borman."
→ Borman's 'Bogey,' Gemini 7 Transcript 1965
Lunar Module Pilot Alan Bean watched particles "haul out" of lunar orbit through the AOT, fast enough that he abandoned his water-boiler hypothesis because some were escaping the Moon entirely. Pete Conrad later assessed his tracking light had burned out. Houston's electrical telemetry showed it still drawing current, and CMP Gordon couldn't see Intrepid in his sextant either way. A separate "all 8's" pulse on the AGS register was blamed on EMI seen on "most all the spacecraft" tested at Bethpage.
→ Apollo 12 Tracking-Light Disagreement, Lunar Orbit
Across three days of Apollo 17 the crew logged three distinct unexplained events. Day one: a field of flat, flakelike fragments up to six inches across that LMP Schmitt said "looks like the Fourth of July out of Ron's window", attributed to the S-IVB stage as a "wild guess." Day two: Cernan tracked a rotating object 10–12 Earth diameters out, alternating bright and dim flashes; Houston requested NOUN 20 attitude data to triangulate. Day three: Schmitt called out "a flash on the lunar surface!" north of Grimaldi crater, prompting Houston to check seismometers.
→ Apollo 17 Three-Day Anomaly Transcript
An FBI Lab graphic, overlaid on an actual on-site photograph, reconstructs an ellipsoid 130–195 feet long with a bronze metallic surface, the size class of a regional commercial airliner. Multiple independent witnesses reported the object materialized from within a bright light in the sky and vanished instantaneously, with no observable approach or departure. The object itself was not in the underlying photo; the rendering is a testimony reconstruction.
→ FBI Lab Composite, Bronze Ellipsoid, 2023
On 18 November 2016, a P-8A Poseidon's EO/IR sensor caught a low-flying contact "in sea skim mode" moving roughly 500 knots southeast through a Russian Carrier Task Group off Syria, passing between the Russian vessel INGUL ARS and an unidentified surface ship before the crew lost it two minutes later. The mission commander logged the encounter as "safe" and "consistent with standard KCTG activity." The report links to video footage; the link is redacted.
→ P-8A Sea-Skimming UAP, 500 Knots, 2016
On July 18, 1963, predating Mariner 4's Mars flyby, the National Aeronautics and Space Council inside the Executive Office of the President drafted contingency thinking on what the description calls "the space alien race question." The memo treats first-contact discovery as a White House-adjacent planning matter requiring scientific, diplomatic and policy coordination, with the possibility of life on Mars singled out as a specific sub-topic.
→ White House 'Space Alien Race' Memo, 1963
Overflights on January 24, 1985 frightened Wewak residents enough that the provincial premier called a public meeting attended by Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister. The NIO put most credence in an Air Niugini pilot whose airborne radar tracked aircraft south-to-north at high altitude near Angoram, alongside visual reports of a single contrail at 1900 local and a 6–8-aircraft formation at 2200. The US Embassy denied any US aircraft or B-52s were in PNG airspace that night and asked USCINCPAC to confirm the denial.
→ PNG High-Altitude Aircraft Cable, January 1985
On 7 June 2024, an AFSOC ISR crew at 23,999 feet over the Gulf of Oman logged a "glowing hot spherical" object with a "vertical unwavering cylindrical pole/bar" attached to its underside, flying 140 knots just above the water with a possible reflection visible below it. The object showed no response to observation and its propulsion was logged "unknown." Original 25-year declassification was 6 June 2049; AARO released it early on 28 October 2025.
→ Glowing Sphere With Pole, Gulf of Oman
Returning from an 11-hour Operation INHERENT RESOLVE mission over Syria on 9 November 2023, an Air Force ISR crew logged a solid object "shaped as a bouncy ball" approaching from the south at near co-altitude, dropping below them, and holding ~424 knots consistently for seven minutes. The form let the file's "Advanced Capabilities" field be marked YES, explicitly citing the speed and shape, even as "Intelligent Control" was logged NO and the assessment recorded "Benign."
→ 'Bouncy Ball' UAP at 424 Knots, Syria
The FBI's 62-HQ-83894 case file consolidates 185 pages of bureau UAP work spanning June 1947 through July 1968, the full early-Cold War arc. Material includes photographic evidence collected at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, engineering-level proposals on potential propulsion systems, and convention programs from civilian UAP research networks. The release contains pages and minimal redactions absent from the FBI Vault version.
→ FBI's 21-Year UAP Case File, Section 1
A civilian observed a "large blue featureless triangular object with a solid, unwavering silhouette emitting powerful 'whitish blue' light" hovering near a national security facility for about three minutes, then moving in "jerking" or "jumping" lateral motions inconsistent with "smooth" jet propulsion, roughly eight minutes total, captured on personal cell. Originally SECRET//NOFORN, the report was routed through an OSI derivative classification review where the CI Collections PM cleared it: "I concur with using this at the UNCLASSIFIED level in your product."
→ Blue Triangle Near Security Site, March 2023
On September 12, 2023 the Mexican Congress heard from journalist Jaime Maussan, who presented two alleged non-human corpses plus video of pilot encounters, and former US Navy pilot Ryan Graves, who publicly disowned the corpse display as an "unsubstantiated stunt" that took away from credible pilot testimony. The embassy notes scientists had previously discredited similar specimens. The hearing debated language that, if passed, would make Mexico the first country to formally acknowledge the presence of alien life on Earth.
→ Maussan's 'Non-Human Corpses,' Mexico Hearing 2023
On a night DCA sortie on 27 October 2020 KINGPIN directed a Navy O-3 to identify two contacts at ~26,000 feet. Radar lock and target-pod video captured two IR-significant objects, one circling the other, but the operator couldn't close within 16.9 nautical miles, and both vanished in what the report logs as "1130TH OF A SECOND" (key points read this as an OCR corruption of 1/30th of a second). EW indicators simultaneously flagged noise jamming, false trackfiles and an ambiguous arc.
→ Two IR Contacts Vanish in 1/30 Second
Section 10 of the FBI's 62-HQ-83894 case file, 184 pages of the same June 1947 through July 1968 record, adds further documentation of the bureau's UAP work, including photographic evidence collected at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, technical proposals on possible propulsion systems, and material on civilian researcher organizations. Several newly declassified pages were absent from the redacted version previously published on the FBI Vault.
→ FBI's 21-Year UAP Case File, Section 10
Serial 449 of the FBI's 62-HQ-83894 file (18 pages) concentrates on the bureau's tracking of organized civilian UFO research: convention programs, researcher accounts and contemporaneous media, alongside the file's recurring Oak Ridge photographic evidence and propulsion-system proposals. The release is more complete than the FBI Vault version, with newly declassified pages and only minor remaining redactions.
→ FBI's Civilian-Researcher Tracking, Serial 449
At Apollo 11's July 31, 1969 Technical Crew Debriefing, Lunar Module Pilot Buzz Aldrin reported three distinct anomalies. About a day from the Moon the crew studied an object of notable apparent size through a monocular, the S-IVB upper stage was offered as a candidate but not confirmed. On the second outbound night, Aldrin saw small light flashes inside the darkened cabin at intervals of roughly two minutes. On the return leg, a bright light source was tentatively attributed to a ground-based laser; the identification was never resolved.
→ Aldrin's Three Apollo 11 Anomalies, Debriefing
At 0509Z on 25 January 2024, an Air Force Special Operations ISR platform out of Larissa Air Base, Greece, logged a diamond-shaped object with a non-maneuvering probe slung underneath, holding ~434 knots at FL200, roughly 2.5× the observing aircraft's speed. The catch: it appeared only on the short-wave infrared camera. Optical and full-motion video saw nothing. The two-minute encounter ended at 0511Z; the observer's assessment was filed Benign.
→ 434-Knot SWIR-Only Diamond Over Mediterranean
On 31 March 2023, two F-16CMs from the 77th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron flying defensive counter-air over the Eastern Syria Security Area logged 10 to 20 bright objects maneuvering rapidly west-to-east-northeast above FL600, more than 33,000 feet above the F-16s at FL265. The SNIPER LDP targeting pod held them in TV mode for roughly twenty seconds before they dimmed and dropped from the display. The flight noted no formation (unlike prior sorties), and a targeting-pod comparison against a star produced a "different" signature.
→ F-16s Track 10-20 Objects Above FL600
Across nine months and three crews, NASA's Skylab logged unexplained observations. Skylab 2 Science Pilot Joseph Kerwin reported light flashes perceptible with his eyes closed in darkness, experienced by all three crewmembers, waxing and waning. Skylab 3's Owen Garriott and Jack Lousma tracked a bright reddish object for five to ten minutes that outshone Jupiter and held a nearly identical orbit to Skylab. Skylab 4 Commander Gerald Carr reported flashing lights outside the station with "very definite motion relative to ours," tentatively pinned on debris but unexplained kinematically.
→ Three-Crew Skylab Anomaly Debriefings, 1973-74
At the January 8, 1973 Apollo 17 Crew Debriefing for Science, UV experiment co-investigator Dick Henry reported a result the panel had not expected: surveys at high northern and southern galactic latitudes returned an ultraviolet spectrum indistinguishable from that of a hot star, yet no hot stars sat in the instrument's field of view. Henry offered galactic-plane starlight reflecting off interstellar dust as a conservative explanation, but acknowledged spectral characteristics undermine that theory, leaving extragalactic radiation as a live alternative.
→ Apollo 17 UV Hot-Star Spectrum Anomaly
On October 30, 2001, US Ambassador Vershbow pressed Russian officials on Georgian accusations that Russian aircraft had bombed the Kodori Gorge two days earlier. Russia's MFA Georgia desk chief, Tereoken, brushed off the reports as ones that "might as well have been about UFOs" and claimed Moscow lacked the technical capability to detect foreign planes in the region. The cable's authors filed the deflection as "humorous if it were not for the seriousness of the violations," adding that the denials "reflect a traditional Russian penchant to avoid an awkward admission with a bold lie."
→ Russia's 'Bold Lie' on Georgian Airspace, 2001