Monthly global UFO/UAP/USO/ULO case roundups, a government-policy library, and deep dives on classic cases. Summaries are free; full articles are Premium.
Subscribe to unlock allThis issue spotlights 4 documents newly added to the archive, with source excerpts, cross-file comparison, and reading guides.
Free preview →A format sample for the monthly global roundup, showing each issue's structure: sightings and official developments sorted into UAP (air) / USO (underwater) / ULO (other), each with date, location and source type, closing with "This month's observations" and a "source-reliability note." Real issues are compiled from cited public sources and human-reviewed before publishing.
Free preview →In November 2004, during training off Southern California, the USS Nimitz carrier strike group recorded — across multiple sensors and F/A-18 aircrew — a white capsule-shaped ("Tic Tac") object showing anomalous acceleration and maneuver. The 2017 release of the "FLIR1" video and aircrew testimony made it central to the modern UAP debate.
Free preview →On the evening of 13 March 1997, a mass sighting unfolded over Arizona: thousands reported a huge V-shaped craft drifting slowly overhead, and later a hovering row of lights. One of the most-witnessed events in modern history — and really two phenomena that must be separated.
Free preview →Over two nights in late December 1980, U.S. servicemen near the twin RAF Bentwaters/Woodbridge bases in Suffolk, England, reported unexplained lights and landing traces in Rendlesham Forest. Deputy base commander Lt Col Halt left a memo and an on-site audio recording, making this "Britain's Roswell."
Free preview →In July 1947 the U.S. Army Air Forces briefly announced recovery of a "flying disc" near Roswell, New Mexico, then revised it to a weather balloon hours later. This piece lays out the timeline, the reversal of the official account, and the two 1990s U.S. Air Force reports (Project Mogul and the dummy drops) with their controversies.
Free preview →In January 1994, three American pilots aboard a Boeing 747SP watched a luminous, high-G object over Kazakhstan at 41,000 ft for 40 minutes — and the captain photographed it. This U.S. State Department cable filed the sighting officially. This guide walks you through why it matters and what to read.
Free preview →After the 1947 Kenneth Arnold event, FBI HQ amassed thousands of flying-saucer reports under file 62-HQ-83894. This is the first volume — the starting point of the Bureau treating UAP as an official file. This guide explains what's in these 185 scanned pages and how to read them.
Free preview →In Apollo 12's official voice transcript, lunar module pilot Alan Bean — during surface ops — described to Houston "particles of light" that "haul out of here and just press off at the stars." A real-time UAP observation made on duty and logged live by Mission Control. This guide unpacks it.
Free preview →Chile's Committee for the Study of Anomalous Aerial Phenomena (CEFAA) sits within its civil aviation authority (DGAC), approaching UAP through an aviation-safety lens and pooling pilots, radar and military resources for cross-disciplinary analysis — Latin America's flagship official body.
Free preview →France is one of the few countries that houses unidentified-aerial-phenomena research inside its national space agency. GEIPAN, part of CNES (the French space agency), has since 1977 collected, classified and publicly published civilian sighting reports — a rare "official and open database" model.
Free preview →The UK Ministry of Defence long received UFO reports and, in the 1990s, commissioned a classified intelligence study (Project Condign). Declassified in 2006, it leaned toward natural-plasma explanations and recommended ending active investigation. This piece traces UK policy and the report's controversies.
Free preview →The U.S. Department of Defense established the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) in 2022 to coordinate reporting, investigation and declassification of air, underwater and trans-medium UAP. This piece covers AARO's legal basis, reporting channels, reports and public-release policy.
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