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Encounters: The UFO Phenomenon, Exposed!
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1995-10-20
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FOREIGN NEWS
Tribune, New York, NY- June 14,1990
CR: A. Huneeus [Reprinted with permission]
J. ANTONIO HUNEEUS/ SCIENCE FRONTIERS
GREAT SOVIET UFO FLAP OF 1989 CENTERS ON DALNEGORSK CRASH
First in a two-part series
Several months ago we reported in this column about the well-
publicized series of bizarre reports of UFO landings and close
encounters with giant aliens in the Russian city of Voronezh, as well
as other cases obtained from interviews with Soviet researchers during
last fall's International UFO Congress in Frankfurt, Germany. I have
obtained a large amount of Soviet UFO data since then from a variety
of sources both in the Soviet Union and the United States. I recently
completed a lengthy and detailed paper entitled, Red Skies: The Great
1989 UFO Wave In the USSR, to be included in the 1989 Symposium
Proceedings of the Mutual UFO Network(MUFON), the world's largest
research organization in this field, which will take place next month
in Pensacola, Florida. We will publish in this series selected
excerpts which contain interesting physical and military evidence.
The first one deals with the enigmatic report of the crash of an
unknown object in the city of Dalnegorsk on the Pacific coast of the
Soviet Union, while the following week we'll report on a recent radar-
visual UFO incident which resulted in a military scramble alert by
Soviet Air Defense forces. A detailed account of the series of complex
UFO events registered in the city of Dalnegorsk during the past four
years goes beyond the scope of this article. Nevertheless, the
Dalnegorsk flap should be discussed because it contains some of the
most extraordinary physical evidence collected so far anywhere in the
world, and also because UFO sightings continue to be reported in this
area to this day. Thanks to the assistance of Major (Ret.) Colman won
Deviczky, director of the Queens-based ICUFON research group who has
extensive contacts in the Soviet Union, this writer has obtained
several reports of the Dalnegorsk incidents prepared by one of its
principal investigatiors, Valeri Dvuzhilny, head of the Far Eastern
Commission on Anomalous Phenomena. Even though the Commission has
recorded numerous cases going back to the 1970', it seems the most
inportant incident so far was the crash of an unknown object on
Dalnegorsk Hill 611 on January 29, 1986, at 7:55 p.m. On that date,
according to one of the reports by Dvuzhilny,"residents of the
settlements observed a reddish-orange sphere the size of a half moon,
which flew from the southwest at 260 degrees. Its altitude was 700-8-
- meters. The flight was parallel to the wurface of the Earth,
without the angles which are characteristic for meteorites. The
witnesses heard absolutely no noises. The calculated speed by
chronometer was 15 meters per second. There was no change of
direction or of altitude." The object then approached the Izvesrkovaya
mountain, or Hill611, which has an elevation of 600 meters and is
located at the center of the town. "The object made a dive and went
at an angle of 60-70 degrees on the cliff ledge, where it 'fell' and
burned for one hour," continues the report. "Some of the witnesses
affirm that it rose and lowered itself six times, and that its light
was intensified during its rise and weakened during its lowering."
Dvuzhilny and his team arrived on the scene February 3, finding a
number of physical traces, which included lead and iron balls, bits of
glass, a fine mesh or netting, traces of high temperature activity,
magnetic anomalies and damage to nearby trees and stumps. The
materials have been analyzed by several laboratories from three Soviet
academic centers and 11 research institutes. The results, however,
have proven to be highly enigmatic, leading Dvuzhilny and other
scientists to conclude that the Dalnegorsk object was probably an
artificial space probe of non-terestrial origin. According to one
report published in the newspaper Socialist Industry, "In the scales
[or mesh], almost all the elements of the entire periodic table were
found." Spectral analysis of the lead balls, for instance, showed
that besides lead, these contained silicon (20 percent), aluminum(10
percent), iron(15 percent), zinc(1.5percent), titanium(2 percent),
magnesium(1 percent), and silver(2percent), as well as minute portions
of copper, lantanium, praseodymium, calcium, sodium, vanadium, cerium,
chrome, cobalt, nickel, and molybdenum. The scales or mesh reacted in
a very strange manner during the laboratory analysis. The Socialist
Industry report said one of the scientists, A. Makeev, "presented the
roentgenological structural analysis and showed that from one scale,
after melting it in a vacuum, all of a sudden gold, silver, and nickel
disappeared. But there appeared alpha-titanium and molybdenum. In
another scale, the metals did not appear at all. And for some reason,
after the heating, there appeared beryllium sulphide." There were
still further surprises, such as "six areas of magnetized silica rock"
(silica is a nonmagnetic material) found on the site. This and other
results were published by A. Petukhov and T. Faminskaya, members of
the Council of Scientific and Engineering Societies' Commission on
Paranormal Events. "Vivid interest was also evoked by the mesh, a
carbon-based composite of unknown origin," wrote Petukhov and
Faminskaya. "The specimen was found to include quartz filaments 17
microns thick, and golden wires inside each filament." Other anomalous
effects included the blackened photos of Hill 611 taken by the
researchers, and the biological effects on the researchers themselves.
According to Petukhov and Faminskaya, "the researchers working at the
site showed changes in their blood (a reduced count of leucocytes and
platelets, changes in the structure of erythrocytes) and sensory
disturbances." Dvuzhilny described in more detail the medical
investigation involving five researchers who spent considerable time
at Hill 611, and a control group. All of this led some investigators
to conclude that something alien had indeed crashed at Hill 611 V.
Vysotsky, Doctor of Chemistry from Vlakivostok, stated: "Undoubtedly,
this is a high-technology product and not a thing of natural or
terestrial origin." Dvuzhilny proposed that it was "an automatic
scout probe" of alien origin, and rejected the altermative hypothesis
that it could have been a natural plasmoid. This hypothesis was
proposed by a candidate of geological-mineralogical science, V.N.
Salnikov. It was summarized by Yuri Rylkin, a phycisist with the
Tomsk Poltechnical Institure, in a paper presented at the
International UFO Congress in Frankfut in October of 1989. "The
Dalnegorsk object," wrote Rylkin, "represents a plasma formation on
the base of electromagnetical structure, called plasmoid, whose
trajectory passed over geological breaking and parallel to high-
voltage electrotransmission line. It is supposed that this plasmoid
absorbed selectively some chemical elements, for example, the noble
and rare metals. As Salnikov considers, such formations may be formed
by litospherical waveguides, or may appear in anomalous stressed
geophysical fields mear geological breakings." We'll have more to say
about these so-called plasmoids in this series' second part. Still
another hypothesis was offered by Yuri Platov, a senior researcher
with the Institute if Earth Magnetism, Ionesphere and Radiowave
Propagation of the USSR Academy of Sciences and a noted UFO skeptic.
Platov maintains that the Dalnegorsk phenomenon "in reality was
connected with the conduct of a technical experiment." I have seen no
supportive evidence to back that assertion, however. Dvuzhilny
responds that there were no rocket launches and no civilian or
military traffic over Dalnegorsk on that night.
SIGHTINGS CONTINUE
Regardless of its ultimate origin, the crash on Hill 611 was only the
beginning of an intense UFO flap in Dalnegorsk that continues to this
day. For instance, another report by Dvuzhilny indicat6es "on
February 6, 1986, eight days after the UFO crash, there appeared from
the north two yellow globes at 8:30 p.m. They approached the crash
spot, made four circles over it and disappeared with a flash." By and
large, however, the largest display of UFOs in the Dalnegorsk and
Primorye areas occurred on the night of NOv. 28,1987. Again, according
to one of Dvulzhiny's reports, "on Saturday November 28, 1987, 33 UFOs
were flying at a low height over the Eastern coast of Primorye. Their
flights took place between 9:10 pm and midnight. They were of
different shape: cylinders, cigars, globes. They were flying over
five regions and twelve settlements. None of the witnesses claimed
they had seen UFOs. They thought they saw aircraft crashing. All
were wurprised to hear no noise." Inquiries made by Dvuzhilny showed
there had been no flights of civil or military aircraft at that time,
and that no carrier-rockets had been launched from Soviet cosmodromes.
Moreover, continued Dvuzhilny, "the objects observed had nothing in
common with the effects of rocket launching that are quite different.
They were not like fireballs, ball lightning or plasmoids." Further
on, Dvuzhilny added that "out of the 33 UFOs, 13 flew over
Dalnegorsk." There were over 100 vitnesses, including military
personnel, militia (police), border guards and sailors, as well as all
kinds of civilian workers, who were questioned by the Far Eastern
Commission. Finally, reports Dvuzhilny, "those objects caused a two
minute cutting-off of HF [high frequency] circuits of TV, telegraph
and other appliances. Computers were cut off, their programs spoiled.
All that was due to powerful electromagnetic fields of UFOs (cover,
engines) reaching hundreds and thousamds of KWs." Many other sightings
have occurred in Dalnegorsk. According to the Far Eastern Commission,
45 UFOs were registered in 1987, 15 in 1988, 32 in 1989 (up to the
month of July). Nor have the sightings been restricted to Dalnegorsk
alone. Other cases have been reported near the larger city of
Vladivostok. These include a close encounter involving two separate
cars on September 17, 1988, where one of the drivers seemed to lose
control of his car; and a second, undated, event reported by the
Krasnoye Znamia (Red Banner) newspaper, about a whole section of
Vladivostok being illuminated between 2 and 4 a. m. by a light beam
from an unseen source. Because of the late hour, only a few people
who were not asleep observed the phenomenon. Interestingly, similar
occurrences of an unknown light beam illuminating a city have been
reported a few times in the city of Arica in the northern tip of
Chile.
--- .
Titan|um Knight
Mail: titan@sys6626.bison.mb.ca
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