![]() Case Directory Category 2, Close Encounters Preliminary Rating: 5 |
![]() |
![]() |
A Hynek
Classification of Close Encounter is usually
an incident involving an object less than 500
feet from the witness. The size of the
object, viewing conditions, or
stereoscopic vision (depth perception)
may render the object in greater detail and
still qualify the sighting as a Close
Encounter even though the object may have been
beyond 500'. The incident depicted in
the logo was encountered during an intense
storm near Princeton, IN, Aug. 1973. |
Jerry Washington:
April 26, 1986; Chernobyl, Ukraine, Russia On the night of the fire in the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station, some 3 hours after the explosion, a team of nuclear specialists saw in the sky over the station a fiery ball of the color of brass. The witnesses estimated its diameter as 6-8 meters and its distance from the burning nuclear reactor No. 4 as some 300 meters. Just before the observation these specialists measured the level of radiation in the place where they were standing. It was measured at 3000 milliroentgens per hour. "Suddenly two bright rays of crimson color extended from the ball to the reactor... This lasted for some 3 minutes... The rays abruptly faded and the ball slowly floated away in a north-westerly direction, towards Byelorussia. Then we again looked at our radiation monitor. It displayed only 800 milliroentgens per hour..." One month earlier it was reported that there was rising number of UFO observations in the area of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station. Detailed reports and documents reports/860426chernobyl_washington.htm wiki/Chernobyl_disaster (Wikipedia) world-nuclear.org/info/chernobyl/inf07.html |