Declassified UFO / UAP Document

Rapport om fenomenet (Report on the phenomenon)

📅 13 July 1945 📍 Varmunsviken, near Gustavsvik manor 📄 handwritten report

Ever wanted to host your own late-night paranormal radio show?

Across the Airwaves · Narrative Sim · Windows · $2.95

You're on the air. Callers bring Mothman, Fresno Nightcrawlers, UFO sightings, reptilian autopsies, and whispers about AATIP and Project Blue Book. Every reply shapes how the night goes.

UFO & UAP Cryptids Paranormal Government Secrets Classified Files High Strangeness Strange Creatures
The night is long. The lines are open →

AI-Generated Summary

TL;DR

A report from 1945 detailing a sighting of a glowing, round object by four children in Sweden. The report notes the object's trajectory but states that its size and speed remain unknown due to the inability to judge distance.

This handwritten document is a report of an aerial phenomenon observed on July 13, 1945, at 18:45. The witness, a parent, records the account of their four children, aged between 7 and 12 years old. The children observed a clear, glowing, round object from the western shore of Varmunsviken, specifically from a point located 2 kilometers south of Gustavsvik manor. The object was sighted at a 45-degree angle in an easterly direction. The report notes that the object's movement was generally northward with a slight drift toward the southeast. The author concludes that because the distance to the object could not be determined, it is impossible to ascertain its actual size or speed.

Då avståndet inte kan bedömas till klotet kan ingenting sägas om dess verkliga storlek eller hastighet.

Official Assessment

The object was observed at 18:45 on July 13, 1945, by four children aged 7-12. It was described as a clear, glowing, round object seen from the western shore of Varmunsviken, 2 km south of Gustavsvik manor. The object was observed at a 45-degree angle looking east. Its movement was generally north with a slight drift to the southeast. Due to the inability to judge distance, the observer states that nothing can be said about the object's true size or speed.