A series of reports about UFOs is about to be made public

UFO enthusiasts and researchers are about to have a chance to access a huge repository of documents.

Chris Rutkowski, a Canadian writer and scientific researcher, has just donated a collection of more than 20,000 UFO reports he collected in the past three decades, plus 10,000 UFO-related documents from the Canadian government, University of Manitoba said.

Picture 1 of A series of reports about UFOs is about to be made public
A large number of UFO research papers are about to be made public in digital form.

Some of these documents relate to the so-called Falcon Lake incident , in Manitoba, which Rutkowski believes is one of the most noted UFO cases in Canadian history.

"It's more remarkable than the Roswell incident because the US still doesn't realize that anything happened at Roswell ," Rutkowski said.

The incident was reported to take place on May 20, 1967, when industrial mechanic Stefan Michalak was searching the wilderness to find quartz and silver and was startled by a goose that seemed to be excited by something. Something nearby.

Michalak looked up and saw two cigar-shaped objects hovering about 45m away, one landing while the other flying away. Michalak decided to approach about 30 minutes later, sensing the smell of sulfur as he approached. The flying saucer was so hot it burned through the gloves when he touched it.

As the object spun and launched, Michalak's entire body was sprayed with hot air, causing him to have first-degree burns on his abdomen.

Years later, a piece of metal was found from the landing zone, tests showing it was highly radioactive.

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