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Approved For Release 2001/04/02 : CIA-RDP81R00560R000100010010-0
UFO ENCOUNTER Ii
Sample Case Selected by the UFO
Subcommittee of the AIAA
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
The Lakenheath
England, Radar-Visual
UFO Case,
August 13-14, 1956
Introduction
The following story—a second exam-
ple of the type of observation which
forms the core of the UFO issue
—has been selected by the UFO Sub-
committee of the AIAA for publica-
tion not only because of its puzzling
content, but also because of the mul-
tiplicity of, observations. The author,
a former member of the “Condon
Committee” (University of Colorado
UFO study team), discusses the case,
but does not offer an explanation.
The same was true for the first case,
published in the July 1971 A/A,
where the principal observers were
highly qualified professionals making
sightings in their line of duty. Both
case studies are intended to give the
reader a flavor of the observational
residue material which underlies the
UFO controversy. We hope he will
give it his independent assessment as
engineer or scientist.
On a pleasant August evening in
1956, the night-watch supervisor at
the Lakenheath, England, Radar Air
Traffic Control Center (RATCC), a
U.S. Air Force noncommissioned of-
ficer, was startled by a telephone call
from the Bentwaters GCA (Ground
Controlled Approach) radar installa-
tion (see map) asking, “Do you have
any targets on your scopes traveling
at 4006 mph?” Thus began one of
the strangest and most disturbing
radar-visual UFO episodes on record.
There is a very large, confusing re-
port on the Lakenheath-Bentwaters
. incident in the U.S. Air Force Project
By G. D. THAYER
was the name of the U.S. Air Force
UFO investigation). At least three
separate times unidentified radar
echoes (UREs) were tracked by the
GCA unit at Bentwaters before the
telephone contact with Lakenheath;
and although these are highly inter-
esting events in themselves, they did
not involve confirmatory visual and
airborne radar contacts. A detailed
account of these first three radar con-
tacts can be found in an earlier
paper by James McDonald (FSR 16,
“UFOs over Lakenheath in 1956,”
1970, pages 9-17). “Scientific Study
of Unidentified Flying Objects”
(Bantam Books, 1969; hereafter re-
fered to as the “Condon Report”)
contains no account of these because
the pertinent Bluebook files were ob-
tained too late for inclusion. The
Condon Report does contain an inde-
pendent account of the primary inci-
dent at Lakenheath, as reported by
the night-watch supervisor, not found
in the Bluebook file; this separate
report forms the most coherent ac-
count of the events at. Lakenheath.
Following a brief description of
the events at Bentwaters based on the
Bluebook file, the Lakenheath inci-
dent will be described here based
mainly on the night-watch super-
visor’s account.
Account of Observations
The four events at Bentwaters
GCA (see map for plots of these
radar tracks) took this order:
-1, At 2130Z a URE (No. 1 in
map) was picked up on the Bent-
waters AN/MPN-11A GCA radar
about 25-30 mi. to the ESE. (Note
that Z time-—zero meridian time—,-
or GMT, is also local time in the
Lakenheath-Bentwaters area.) This
URE moved steadily on a constant
contact was lost about 15-20 mi. to
the WNW of Bentwaters. The radar
operator estimated the apparent :
speed of the URE as 4000 mph; but '
the transit time of 30 sec yields an
estimate of 4800-6000 mph, and the ;
operator’s estimate of 5-6 mi. cov- ;
ered by the URE between PPI
sweeps (2 sec apart) gives an esti- |
mate of 9000-10,800 mph. “The:
size of the blip when picked up was :
that of a normal aircraft target. [It] :
diminished in size and intensity to |
the vanishing point before crossing |
the entire radar screen.’
2. A “few minutes later,” say :
roughly 2135Z, a group of 12-15:
UREs was picked up on the PPI!
about 8 mi. SW of Bentwaters (No. |
2 in map). These echoes “appeared |
as normal targets,” and “normal
checks made to determine possible -
malfunctions of the GCA radar j
failed to indicate anything was!
technically wrong.” These URE’s
appeared to move as a group toward
the NE at varying speeds reported as |
80-125 mph. The group covered a} i
“6-7-mi. area” on the scope. These
echoes ‘faded considerably” at a
point 14 mi. NE of Bentwaters, but |
were tracked to a point about 40 mi.
NE of Bentwaters when they merged |
into a single strong echo ‘ ‘several |
times larger than a B-36 return’
under comparable conditions.” This |
single echo remained stationary at
the point 40 mi. NE of Bentwaters |
for 10-15 min., then moved to the:
NE for 5-6 mi., stopped again for:
3-5 min., and finally moved out of '
range (50 mi.) of the radar at)
2155Z. The average apparent speed |
of the URE group {for the time it was |
in motion can be readily calculated
as between 290 and 700 mph (58 mi.
in 5-12 min—again differing from
!
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