Declassified UFO / UAP Document

Flying Saucer Review, Vol. 17, No. 2, March/April 1971

🏛 Flying Saucer Service Ltd. 📄 Journal

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AI-Generated Summary

TL;DR

This issue of Flying Saucer Review (March/April 1971) documents international UAP sightings, including landing reports in Finland and Brazil, and provides technical analysis of photographic evidence from Warminster, England. It also explores the physiological and psychological effects of UAP encounters on witnesses.

This document is the March/April 1971 issue of the Flying Saucer Review (Vol. 17, No. 2). The editorial highlights the challenges faced by the publication due to a postal strike in the United Kingdom, which disrupted communications and distribution. The journal contains several investigative reports and articles regarding UAP sightings and related phenomena. Key reports include an analysis of a UFO sighting in Saapunki, Finland, where 'dark green ice' was found at a landing site, and a study by Dr. Berthold Eric Schwarz on 'UFO-induced temporary paralysis,' which examines the physiological effects reported by witnesses. Another significant feature is the ongoing investigation into the 'Cradle Hill' photographs taken in Warminster, England, with contributions from John E. Ben and Michael Samuels, who discuss photographic anomalies and the difficulty of verifying the images. The journal also features a report by Dr. Walter Buhler on a landing incident in Quipapá, Brazil, involving small humanoid entities. Additionally, the issue includes a 'New FSR Catalogue' installment documenting various UFO encounters involving animals, and an article by Luis Schönherr on the comparative phenomenology of UFO experiences, questioning the reality of these events versus potential hallucinatory effects. The journal serves as a platform for researchers to share findings, debate evidence, and maintain a record of global UAP activity, while also advertising related literature and books.

The early days of November 1970 witnessed an important event, namely the advent of this new journal of ours—in our field, an act of publishing faith!

Key Persons