There was a rise in the number of North Americans who looked up into the sky in 2019 and found something that didn't look like a bird or a plane.
Peter Davenport, who runs the independent organization that's based in Davenport, Washington, said he couldn't explain why more people called about seeing flashing white lights, fireballs, disc-shaped objects or other oddities in 2019.
"One of the mysteries of ufology is there is a fluctuation in the number of reports over the years," he told ABC News in a phone interview. "Some years it's been low, but it's gotten higher recently."
In case you are keeping track:
UFO sightings triple in New York City in 2019
At least according to 35 New Yorkers who reported UFOs in 2019, three times the 12 who called in close encounters the year before.
Manhattan and Queens had the most believers, with 12 sightings in each borough, according to data from the National UFO Reporting Center. Brooklyn logged eight sightings, and Staten Island and The Bronx just two and one respectively.
Otherworldly tourists traveled to and from Gotham in a variety of craft, including "silver, cigar-shaped" space vehicles, and a "bright green orb” — that apparently was not a lime-colored cab in Midtown.
‘Real UFO’ video shows several bright lights hovering off N.C.
A video claiming to depict a “real UFO sighting” off the coast of North Carolina has sparked intense debate about the origin of the several lights shown floating together over the water in the clip.
YouTube user William Guy posted the original video on Sept. 28, and it’s accumulated more than 420,000 views since it first appeared online. The 30-second clip was shot from a ferry at sunset off the Outer Banks in N.C., according to the Charlotte Observer .
Navy says release of files into UFO sightings would 'damage' security - Business Insider
The term UFO, along with others like "unidentified aerial phenomena" and "unidentified flying object," does not necessarily mean the object is thought to be extraterrestrial. Many such sightings ultimately end up having logical and earthly explanations — often involving military technology.
The Department of Defense videos show pilots confused by what they are seeing. In one video, a pilot said: "What the f--- is that thing?"
And here's another article:
How Skinwalker Ranch Became a Hotbed of Paranormal Activity - HISTORY
Some have called it a supernatural place. Others have deemed it “cursed.” Terry Sherman got so spooked by the happenings on his new cattle ranch that 18 months after moving his family of four to the property now known by many as “Skinwalker Ranch” in northeastern Utah, he sold the 512-acre parcel away.
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Under the name the National Institute for Discovery Science, Bigelow set up round-the-clock surveillance of the ranch, hoping to get to the bottom of the paranormal claims. But while that surveillance yielded a book, Hunt for the Skinwalker: Science Confronts the Unexplained at a Remote Ranch in Utah, in which several of the researchers claimed to have seen paranormal activities, they were unable to capture any meaningful physical evidence supporting the Shermans’ incredible stories.
Happening on Twitter
Skinwalker Ranch, notorious for its UFO activity, has been outfitted with surveillance systems to capture evidence… https://t.co/60EQwHdGhH AncientAliens Thu Mar 12 17:00:13 +0000 2020
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