One of Australia's most baffling UFO mysteries still unsolved 52 years on .

Starship

Adept
One of Australia's greatest mysteries. Thanks for sharing these videos, a few of them I hadn't seen.

Perhaps some sort of top secret military project, the fact that the army and airforce seemed to instantly know about it suggests that they were following a test. Tests have been carried out all over the world with these flying vehicles.

The story about the Tanya girl is interesting, she saw something so they abducted the whole family and flashed their memory Men in Black or "DC Legends of Tomorrow" style.
 

August

Metanoia
One of Australia's greatest mysteries. Thanks for sharing these videos, a few of them I hadn't seen.

Perhaps some sort of top secret military project, the fact that the army and airforce seemed to instantly know about it suggests that they were following a test. Tests have been carried out all over the world with these flying vehicles.

The story about the Tanya girl is interesting, she saw something so they abducted the whole family and flashed their memory Men in Black or "DC Legends of Tomorrow" style.


Yes I must try and follow up on what happened to that girl and her family.
 

August

Metanoia
One of Australia's greatest mysteries. Thanks for sharing these videos, a few of them I hadn't seen.

Perhaps some sort of top secret military project, the fact that the army and airforce seemed to instantly know about it suggests that they were following a test. Tests have been carried out all over the world with these flying vehicles.

The story about the Tanya girl is interesting, she saw something so they abducted the whole family and flashed their memory Men in Black or "DC Legends of Tomorrow" style.

Found this so far about Tanya .

“Pro” item #4: the mysterious “Tanya.”

She’s remembered by one of the women interviewed in “Westall ’66” as a girl who’d raced after the landed UFO in the Grange, got to it first, saw it landed on the ground. She went back to the school afterward but somehow suffered a breakdown, was taken off in an ambulance. “That was the last time I ever saw her.”

(“I was trying to keep up when suddenly Tanya came racing back towards me, petrified,” runs an even more dramatic version of the story that appeared in April 2016 in the Woman’s Day magazine, the link provided on the Westall Facebook page. “She was screaming and crying, talking gibberish. She ran straight past me like I wasn’t there. … I watched as paramedics tried to get Tanya into the ambulance. She didn’t want to go and put up a fight. I could still hear her screams as it drove away. That was the last time I saw her.”)

A query posted to the Facebook page on April 9 asks “what happened to the girl who ran ahead of her friends and got right up to one of the crafts … fainted, was taken away by ambulance and was never seen again.” There’s a remarkable response from one Lance Brown:

“In that 2 month period I’d been at school Tanya had been quite notorious to say the least. But when she vanished I didn’t relate it to the ufo, more her wild ways.”

Questions posed to this Lance Brown, by Basterfield and by Ryan, seem to have gotten no further responses. My guess is that he figured he’d already said too much, and clammed up. There’s indeed a suppression that operates in UFO matters, but not necessarily of their unearthly, otherworldly aspects. It may be precisely their all-too-earthly aspect, like what the UFO stands for in the fate of this “notorious” young lady–“much faster” than the other girls, as one witness put it–that calls for concealment........................................
 

karl 12

Noble
Good stuff mate and in the vid below science teacher Andrew Greenwood is being interviewed by American physicist, Dr. James E. McDonald.





More on his Aussie research and Anne Druffel's (great) book 'Firestorm'.


Dr James Mcdonald with John Pearce - Sydney, June 26th, 1967.

jy50dd9dfd.jpg


..Chapter 8 of the book covers quite a bit of Australian UFOlogy for this era. While here, McDonald "...consulted with numerous veteran researchers, including Peter Norris, Ian McLaren, Roy Russell and Stan Seers among others..

"McDonald was always on the lookout for cases where some type of possible physical evidence had been obtained. " (p.173.) The chapter provides concise details of cases such as the 5 Mar 1967 Coyle photographs; the 23 August 1953 T. Drury movie film; the 2 Apr 1966 James J. Kibel Melbourne photograph; the 6 Apr 1966 Westall High School incident; the 26/27 June 1959 Gill CE3 at Boianai; and the 19 January 1966 Tully "nest" case.


In this link about Mcdonald's Australian research there are also some intriguing comments made about how the scientist may have found out what was actually behind the phenomenon.. but sadly he died before he could share it.

Cheers.
 
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