Map of Sweden with Military Locations and Incident Dates
A map of Sweden marking military and other locations with handwritten annotations indicating dates of 29/7 and 30/7.
A map of Sweden marking military and other locations with handwritten annotations indicating dates of 29/7 and 30/7.
This document is a map of Sweden containing two specific handwritten red ink annotations near Skellefteå and Sundsvall. The markings include the text 'IV - 7' and '2150'.
This document is a blank page containing only the reference number '1-3/8'. It provides no substantive information.
This document is a geographic map of Sweden featuring various cities and towns. It contains handwritten red annotations pointing toward the Stockholm region.
A map of Sweden identifying military and civilian locations. It contains handwritten annotations including '2/8' and '4/8'.
This document is a map of Sweden featuring various cities and infrastructure. It contains two hand-drawn red arrows pointing toward the Stockholm and Nynashamn regions.
This document is a map of Sweden annotated with red ink markings indicating specific times and directional movements. It serves as a visual record of potential activity or operational tracking.
This document is a geographic map of Sweden featuring various cities and towns. It contains handwritten red arrow annotations near Karlstad and Stockholm.
A map of Sweden with hand-drawn flight path annotations and timestamps near Malmö and Visby. It serves as a visual record of movement or activity at specific locations.
This is a map of Sweden annotated with flight paths, dates, and times. It appears to track aerial movements across the country during the month of July.
A map of Sweden showing military billeting locations and movement paths between July 10th and August 8th. It features handwritten annotations of times and directional arrows indicating activity across the country.
A map of Sweden annotated with handwritten timestamps and locations, likely documenting a series of aerial sightings. It includes a red-inked note referencing an additional report.
A map of Sweden annotated with dates and times, likely tracking a series of events or reports in August. It includes a specific reference to two reports in Stockholm at 20:40.
A map of Sweden containing handwritten red ink annotations and arrows. The document provides no textual explanation for the markings.
A map of Sweden documenting approximately 30 reports of cigar-shaped projectiles occurring between August and October. The reports are being analyzed for geographic and chronological patterns.
This is an official Swedish aeronautical map index for flight charts at a 1:300,000 scale. It serves as a geographic reference for flight navigation in Northern Europe.
This is an official aeronautical chart index map for Northern Europe at a 1:300,000 scale. It is marked for official use only and provides a grid reference for regional flight navigation.
This is a Swedish military map index for 1:300,000 scale flight charts covering Northern Europe. It is marked for official use only.
A 1988 classified Swedish flight chart index map featuring handwritten red ink annotations across the Nordic and Baltic regions. The document serves as a reference for flight map sheet identification.
A 1946 Swedish military document reports on radio monitoring of aircraft traffic suspected of being linked to the remote control of robot planes. It provides a list of specific dates and times of these interceptions.
A report describing the sighting of two fireballs in Sweden at 20:47, with the author concluding they were likely high-altitude meteors.
Professor Bertil Lindblad of the Stockholm Observatory identifies a reported aerial object as likely being a meteor. He advises caution regarding the accuracy of witness accounts published in newspapers.
The Stockholm Observatory analyzes reports of aerial phenomena from July 9-11, concluding they are likely bright meteors. The author explains the optical illusion of angular velocity that leads observers to misidentify meteors as projectiles.
A 1946 letter from the Stockholm Observatory to the Swedish Defense Staff evaluating reports of aerial light phenomena. The author concludes that while some sightings are likely meteors, others, such as cigar-shaped objects, remain unexplained and potentially anomalous.
A 1946 letter from the Stockholm Observatory to the Swedish Defense Staff regarding the analysis of a photographed fire phenomenon. The author concludes that a meteor cannot be ruled out and suggests using spectral photography to distinguish such phenomena from rocket-like projectiles.
This document provides a technical design for a 10-camera spectrograph system intended to monitor V-bombs. It specifies the use of Kodak Retina cameras and prism requirements for spectral analysis.
A 1946 memorandum proposing the use of spectrographic analysis and rotating-shutter cameras to identify and measure the speed of V-bombs. The author suggests a collaboration between the company Aga and the Swedish National Defence Research Institute to develop the necessary equipment.
A 1946 Swedish military briefing note documenting concerns about press coverage of 'ghost bombs' and a theory that they were remotely controlled by foreign agents within Sweden.
This 1946 Swedish document confirms that the Royal Board of Customs agreed to assist the Defence Staff in reporting observations of 'space projectiles' by issuing a circular to regional customs and border authorities.
A 1946 Swedish customs circular establishing reporting protocols for 'space projectiles' to the Defence Staff. It provides specific guidelines for documenting sightings, including time, location, trajectory, and associated phenomena like radio interference.
A 1946 Swedish government directive establishing formal reporting procedures for 'space projectiles' observed by customs and border personnel. It mandates that all such reports be treated as confidential and directed to the Swedish Defense Staff.
This is a 1943 Swedish military map (LBOKARTA III) containing extensive handwritten notations of dates and times, likely tracking movements or events over a period in March and April 1943.
This is a Swedish aeronautical map index for 1:300,000 scale charts. It features extensive handwritten date annotations across various geographic regions.
This document is a blank page with a handwritten header indicating it is an overview covering the period from May 23, 1946, to July 11, 1946.
This is an official Swedish Defense Staff map index for 1:300,000 scale aeronautical charts. It contains handwritten annotations that appear to track flight paths or incidents across Northern Europe.
This is a single-page document containing a brief, handwritten note in French dated 1946. The content is largely illegible and provides no context.
A 1946 secret Swedish military letter discussing the coordination of surveillance operations to the south between the Air Force Administration and the Defence Staff.
This document outlines the characteristics of unidentified aerial phenomena and the formation of a Swedish military committee to investigate them. It details technical observations regarding flight behavior, propulsion, and control mechanisms.
This document details the Swedish military's organized response to reports of flying projectiles, including public reporting, radar surveillance, and aerial monitoring efforts. It highlights the coordination between the Defense Staff, Air Force, Navy, and the National Defence Radio Establishment.
This report summarizes Swedish military and research efforts to investigate alleged impact sites. It concludes that current radio surveillance equipment is inadequate for identifying the source of unexplained indications detected by the FRA.
A Swedish military report from August 1950 detailing the radar tracking of an unidentified 'space projectile' that exhibited significant speed and course changes.
This report documents multiple sightings of small, torpedo-like objects over Lake Trehörningen in Sweden during the summer. The author expresses doubt about whether the objects actually impacted the water due to the distance of the observers.
A collection of witness reports from Långviken, Sweden, describing unidentified aerial objects and persistent smoke trails observed between February and August. The sightings include descriptions of cigar-shaped objects with glowing cores and high-speed movement.
A handwritten report from F16 (Uppsala) analyzing an aerial observation. The author calculates a speed of 33-50 m/s and questions if the object was a bird or other disturbance.
This document is a page of handwritten mathematical and trigonometric calculations. It contains technical data points including altitude and speed, but lacks context, dates, or authorship.
This document contains handwritten geometric calculations regarding a sighting in Fredriksborg on July 18th at 2125 hours. It estimates an object's speed at 300 meters per second.
This is a 1946 topographic map of the Degerfors S.O. area in Sweden, issued by the General Staff. It contains administrative processing stamps from August 1946 and lists the personnel involved in the survey and drafting process.
A map of Sweden produced by the Air Defense Bureau featuring hand-drawn directional arrows indicating flight paths. The document provides a visual record of movement patterns across the country without accompanying textual data.
A Swedish military map dated 9/7 at 1430, featuring handwritten annotations for observations, flight paths, explosions, and impacts. It serves as a visual record of military or aerial activity across Sweden.
A map of Sweden annotated with sighting locations and time-coded arrows. The markings distinguish between events occurring between 21:00-22:00 and 23:00-01:00.
A map of Sweden dated July 19th to August 8th, featuring military location markers and handwritten annotations indicating movement or activity tracking.
The Swedish Defense Staff requests the Customs Service to assist in reporting 'ghost bomb' sightings, citing the reliability of customs personnel. All matters regarding these projectiles are to be treated as confidential.
This document outlines the official Swedish military protocol for reporting sightings of 'space projectiles'. It provides specific guidelines on data collection, including timing, directional measurement, and physical description of the phenomena.
A 1946 Swedish military directive establishing protocols for observing and reporting 'light phenomena' during military exercises. It mandates specific staffing, readiness levels, and the use of makeshift equipment for measuring elevation.
A 1946 Swedish military directive ordering the observation and reporting of mysterious light phenomena suspected to be remote-controlled weapons. It establishes specific reporting criteria for military units to track these objects during air force exercises.
A 1946 Swedish military directive establishing protocols for reporting 'light phenomena' suspected to be remote-controlled weapons. It mandates 24-hour surveillance and specific data collection on trajectory, sound, and visual characteristics.
A 1946 Swedish military order establishing a formal reporting protocol for aerial phenomena, suspected to be foreign remote-controlled weapons. It mandates specific data collection points for military personnel and prohibits public disclosure of these sightings.
The document records concerns about sightings in Baltic ports and identifies radar experts consulted regarding radar interference issues.
This document outlines a proposal to involve radio amateurs in investigations and lists relevant Swedish organizations including FRA and Customs.
A short handwritten note referencing a projectile sighting addressed to E.V. Vidblom in Grödinge, Sweden.