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Real aliens and UFOs sightings history - part 6
First real aliens and UFO photograph and a most unusual sighting was reported by
Monsieur de Rostan, an amateur astronomer and member of the
Medicophysical Society of Basel, Switzerland. On August 9, 1762, at
Lausanne, Switzerland, he observed through a telescope a spindle-shaped
object crossing and eclipsing the sun. Monsieur de Rostan was able to
observe this object almost daily for close to a month. He also
managed to trace its outline with a camera obscure and sent the picture
to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Paris. Unfortunately, his image --
probably the first one ever obtained of a real aliens and UFO -- no longer exists.
A friend of Monsieur de Rostan, living at Sole near Basel, also
observed the spindle-shaped object against the sun, but it seemed to
present more of an edge and was not quite as broad. Oddly enough, the
real aliens and the real UFO was not visible to a third astronomer, a Monsieur Messier who
studied the sun, during the same time, from Paris -- an indication that
the object was not a sunspot, since it was visible only from certain
angles. (Harold T. Wilkins, "Flying Saucers on the Attack," pp. 211-
212)
The last year of the 18th century had its share of celestial phenomena.
An issue of "Gentleman's Magazine" contained the following story:
"On Sept. 19 [1799], all England saw, at 8:30 p.m., a beautiful ball
blazing with white light, and which passed from N.W. to S.E. It
moved rapidly with a gentle tremulous motion, and noiselessly. The
light cast by it was very vivid, and few red sparks detached
themselves from it... On Nov. 12, something like a large red pillar
of fire passed north to south over Hereford, and alarmed people in
the Forest of Dean, dome miles away. Flashes of extremely vivid
electrical sort preceded its appearance, and at intervals of half an
hour, several hours before. This was at 5:45 a.m.... On this night
the moon shone with uncommon vividness, when between 5 and 6 a.m.,
bright lights in the sky became stationary. They then burst with not
perceptible report, and passed north leaving behind them beautiful
trains of floating fire. Some were pointed, some radiated. Some
sparkled and some had large columns.... Nov. 19, at 6 a.m., folk of
Huncoates, Lincolnshire, were alarmed by vivid flashes lasting 30
seconds, from a ball of fire passing in the sky. [Harold T. Wilkins,
"Flying Saucers on the Attack," p211]