Is this a flying saucer? Chilean government publishes report declaring object spotted above remote copper mine was an 'official UFO'
A government agency in Chile has published a report on two photographs
showing an object which it claims 'can be qualified as a UFO.'
The Committee for the Studies of Anomalous Aerial Phenomena (CEFAA),
part of Chile's Ministerial Department of Civil Aeronautics, studied
photographs of the object after it was spotted by four engineers above a
remote copper mine.
According to the report, the engineers
described the object as 'a flattened disc of brilliant colour with a
diameter of 5 to 10 metres [16 to 32 feet]. It performed ascending,
descending and horizontal movements in short lengths, about 600 meters
above the ground.'
One of the workers reportedly took the
pictures on a Kenox Samsung S860 camera after they spotted the object
at the Collahuasi copper mine while they were working there in April
2013.
While the
engineers did not want to talk about the sighting, the photographer did
tell a colleague at the mine, who sent copies of the images to the CEFAA
earlier this year.
The engineer who sent the pictures on to the government agency also passed on information provided to him by the witnesses, the Huffington Post has reported.
Following investigations, the CEFAA
ruled out the possibility of any meteorological phenomena, including
lenticular clouds, along with experimental aircraft, planes, and weather
balloons, according to the Inquisitr.
The agency also ruled out the possibility of drones in the area.
CEFAA
international affairs director Jose Lay told Leslie Kean, for the
Huffington Post: 'Fishing companies use drones and they make a lot of
noise. This was definitely not a drone.'
The study concludes: 'It is an object or phenomenon of great interest, and it can be qualified as a UFO.'
Caution has been urged however
regarding the conclusions, primarily as the four engineers who witnessed
the incident refused to co-operate with the agency conducting the
investigation.
The report
was released in the same week as the CIA revealed they were responsible
for a number of 'UFO' sightings in Norway in the 1950s.
Throughout
the decade, numerous lights in the sky were reported by members of the
public and pilots alike, with some suggesting they were of
extraterrestrial origin.
But the CIA last week revealed it was the agency flying their secretive U-2 aircraft high in the atmosphere.
In a tweet the CIA said: ‘Remember reports of unusual activity in the skies in the ‘50s? That was us.’
Meanwhile,
a series of images from Nasa's Curiosity rover, which shows a white dot
appearing to descend to the surface of Mars, was also explained this
week.
While one Youtuber
claimed the images was evidence of a UFO landing on the red planet,
Nasa said the anomaly can be easily explained as a so-called 'hot pixel'
in one of the cameras.
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