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History Channel l'Ovni de Place Bonaventure

par Jeromec, lundi 14 novembre 2022, 17:25 (il y a 501 jours)

Salutations

Nos amis de History Channel ont fait un spectaculaire reportage sur les lumières célèbres de Place Bonnaventure... tellement notoire qu'on en parle encore aujourd'hui, pas mal pour des lumières de reflets de piscines...

Merveilleuse prises de vue sur ce secteur de Montréal, Place Bonnaventure, du Métro Bonnaventure, la Place du Canada, et le futur du site du Centre Bell (1996) dans lequels sont déménagés les Fantômes de la Sainte-Flanelle, les Canadiens de Montréal, le club de hockey le plus célèbre, que dis-je le plus légendaire du passé, présent et futur...

Sympathique reportage de 6 minutes qui remet en question la version du plus célèbre enquêteur du paranormal au Québec monsieur Christian Robert Page qui anime une chronique du paranormal dans l'enceinte de Place Bonnaventure, comme le ''hasard'' fait bien les choses... :-)


The Proof Is Out There: Bizarre UFOs Hover Over Montreal (Season 3)

A woman reports a very strange sight in the sky at a hotel in Montreal, Canada.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ncD9oMSmAs

La preuve que C'est pas du Made In China, le mythe n'est pas encore brisé, contrairement à tout ce qui est produit en chine...:-)

https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ovni_au-dessus_de_Montr%C3%A9al_en_1990

Ovni au-dessus de Montréal en 1990


L'ovni au-dessus de Montréal en 1990 est une mystérieuse lumière observée au-dessus de la place Bonaventure dans le centre-ville.

Observation
Le 7 novembre 1990 au soir, un objet lumineux de très grandes dimensions fut observé au-dessus de la place Bonaventure à Montréal (Québec) par une quarantaine de témoins et plusieurs policiers. Des lumières orange provenant de l'engin formaient un ovale. De son centre, s’élevaient des faisceaux de lumière blanche1.

Plusieurs témoins crurent que l’objet était un dirigeable publicitaire, mais le contrôle aérien des aéroports de Dorval et de Mirabel déclara aux policiers ne rien voir sur les écrans radar1.

Les témoins affirment que l'objet resta quasi stationnaire pendant près de trois heures avant de disparaître progressivement derrière un épais rideau de nuages1.

Selon le rapport de la Gendarmerie royale du Canada, l’objet évoluait à une altitude entre 900 m et 2 250 m et son diamètre avoisinait les 450 m1.

Certains témoins affirment avoir vu l’ovni se diriger très lentement vers l'est de Montréal au-dessus du stade olympique1.

Explications avancées
On a évoqué à propos de ces lumières l'hypothèse de plusieurs faisceaux lumineux en provenance du centre-ville, réfléchis par la densité des nuages situés à basse altitude2.

Selon Bernard Guénette et Richard Foster Haines, deux spécialistes des ovnis, les lumières observées provenaient bien d’un objet et non d'un phénomène météorologique ou optique1. Cette explication a été contestée par le sceptique canadien Claude Lafleur, qui a noté que les rapports de la police montrent que l'« objet » n'était visible que depuis les abords de la Place Bonaventure. Selon lui, personne d'autre habitant ou travaillant dans les nombreux immeubles situés au centre-ville de Montréal n'a signalé le mystérieux ovni ; on peut donc difficilement expliquer pourquoi un objet lumineux d'un diamètre de plusieurs centaines de mètres et situé à une hauteur d'un ou deux kilomètres n'a pas été repéré à l'extérieur d'une zone aussi étroite3.

Claude Lafleur note également qu'un ufologue québécois habitué à observer les aurores boréales affirme en avoir aperçu une ce soir là alors que les rapports officiels indiquent une absence complète3.

Références
Stéphan Schneider, « Il y a 22 ans, un ovni était aperçu à Montréal » [archive], sur le site Ciel Québécois, 20 octobre 2012.
« Un ovni en plein cœur de Montréal » [archive], reportage de Radio Canada datant du 8 novembre 1990.
Quelque articles sur les ovnis rédigés pour Le Québec sceptique [archive].

Archive L'histoire de l'OVNI qui a survolé Montréal en 1990

par Jeromec, mardi 15 novembre 2022, 08:38 (il y a 500 jours) @ Jeromec

La vidéo n'est pas récente, mais à très bien vieillit, Du Canal D

Reconstitution des événements de l'Ovni de Place Bonnaventure.

L'histoire de l'OVNI qui a survolé Montréal en 1990 (11 Minutes)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Xq0ntEiTVo&t=296s

22 Sept 2022 les Conservateur s'informent sur les ovnis

par Jeromec, mercredi 16 novembre 2022, 09:24 (il y a 499 jours) @ Jeromec

22 Sept 2022, le chiffre ''magique ''' 22 Voilà les flics, 22 voilà Caufield...

Après des années d'attente... les conservateurs ont fait une demande d'accès à l'information sur les OVNIS! Miracle!
Yahoo!

Le dossier a peut-être même ATTERIT sur le bureau de l'ancien ministre des transports et des affaires étrangères, Marc Garneau:-) ? Le premier canadien dans l'espace... après Plume Latraverse et Gerry Boulet bien sûr..:-)

:-D
Members of Pentagon's UFO task force briefed Canadian military officials this year
The Pentagon is seen from Air Force One as it flies over Washington, March 2, 2022. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File) The Pentagon is seen from Air Force One as it flies over Washington, March 2, 2022. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)
Daniel Otis
CTVNews.ca Writer
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Published Nov. 15, 2022 7:51 p.m. EST

Members of the Pentagon's UFO task force briefed Canadian military officials earlier this year, a previously unreported meeting that was revealed this week.

''Des membres du groupe de travail sur les ovnis du Pentagone ont informé les responsables militaires canadiens plus tôt cette année, une réunion non signalée auparavant qui a été révélée cette semaine.
''

The Feb. 22 briefing was led by a U.S. Air Force intelligence officer who contributed to a headline-grabbing June 2021 report on recent American military sightings of unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAP: the term U.S. authorities use for what are more commonly known as unidentified flying objects and UFOs.

According to a document released on Nov. 14, the February briefing was delivered by "multiple" members of the Pentagon's UAP Task Force and attended by 10 Canadian defence officials, including personnel from the Royal Canadian Air Force and Canadian Forces Intelligence Command, which is responsible for collecting and assessing military intelligence.­

"Officials from the [Department of Defence] UAP Task Force and the National Intelligence Manager for Aviation met with Canadian Department of National Defence and Royal Canadian Air Force officials on Feb. 22, 2022, as part of our continued partnership on airspace security, to include Unidentified Aerial Phenomena," U.S. Department of Defence Spokesperson Susan Gough told CTVNews.ca.

Canada's Department of National Defence was unable to provide comments ahead of publication.

"It’s clear the American UAP Task Force wants to work with our government," Conservative defence critic James Bezan told CTVNews.ca on Tuesday from Ottawa. "Any attempts from Government of Canada officials to downplay either the data or the reports would be completely unacceptable."

Bezan believes Canada should be following the United States' lead and investigating UAP.

"The Canadian government needs to implement a scientific plan to identify the origins and intent of UAP," Bezan, member of Parliament for Selkirk-Interlake-Eastman in Manitoba, explained. "Conservatives believe the best way to start that process is for government to adopt a streamlined, whole-of-government approach to standardize the collection of reports across numerous departments and contractors… All efforts undertaken to investigate UAP should be made public in a responsible manner. "

For its part, the Canadian military routinely states that it does "not typically investigate sightings of unknown or unexplained phenomena outside the context of investigating credible threats, potential threats, or potential distress in the case of search and rescue."

Since 2016, at least four cases appear to have met that criteria.

The single February 2022 briefing from U.S. officials was revealed by Canada's Department of National Defence in a Nov. 14 reply to questions posed by Conservative member of Parliament Larry Maguire.

Maguire, the Conservative representative for Brandon-Souris in southwestern Manitoba, had used an accountability mechanism MPs have to ask the federal government to provide a written account of alleged contacts with U.S. military and intelligence officials on the subject of UAP. While Global Affairs Canada said there had been no contacts, National Defence acknowledged the February briefing in its reply to the Sept. 22 order paper question. Similar to verbal queries during question period in Parliament, order paper questions allow MPs to seek information from the government, but in writing. These responses are then tabled in the House of Commons.

The response was signed by Defence Minister Anita Anand’s parliamentary secretary, Cambridge, Ont. member of Parliament Bryan May.


Opposition Member of Parliament Larry Maguire received the above response on Nov. 14 to questions he posed in September on the Canadian government's contacts with U.S. officials on the subject of unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAP.

An activist farmer and MP since 2013, Maguire is perhaps the most vocal proponent for UAP transparency on Parliament Hill; he has sought information from former U.S. officials and has used his committee work to probe the government for answers.

"From the meetings our government has already had with the UAP Task Force, one would think they have a good idea of where to start and begin the process to investigate the entire topic," Maguire, who was unavailable for comment, wrote on Twitter on Tuesday. "If there was ever an issue that MPs could work on in a collaborative manner, this is it. I hope folks start writing their MPs and encourage them to work together on this."

Also in a Tuesday tweet, Maguire revealed that he has asked Canada's chief science advisor to launch an official UAP study.

"In fact, my team has kept me informed of the recent initiatives in the U.S. on UAPs," Chief Science Advisor Dr. Mona Nemer replied in an Oct. 21 letter posted to Twitter. "My team intends to monitor the next steps in each of these initiatives."

The February 2022 UAP briefing was led by the U.S. National Intelligence Manager for Aviation, who has a mandate to "lead Intelligence Community efforts to identify, analyze, and integrate intelligence on threats and vulnerabilities in the air domain." The position is currently held by U.S. Air Force Major General Daniel L. Simpson.

The U.S. National Intelligence Manager for Aviation's office co-authored the June 2021 UAP report along with the UAP Task Force, and other parts of the U.S. government and military. A publicly-available version of the report outlines 143 unexplained U.S. military reports from 2004 to 2021, which have included objects that appeared to "manoeuver abruptly, or move at considerable speed, without discernable means of propulsion."

The Pentagon's UAP Task Force was established by the U.S. Department of Defense in August 2020 to "improve its understanding of, and gain insight into, the nature and origins of UAPs."

It has since been reformed, and now operates as the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office. While officials there have found no evidence that UAP have otherworldly origins, they are still working to find explanations for several sightings.

"We know that our service members have encountered unidentified aerial phenomena," Ronald Moultrie, the UAP office's current head, said during a May 2022 Congressional hearing on UAP—the first of its kind in more than 50 years. "We're open to any conclusions that we may encounter."

NASA has also announced efforts to study UAP.

Canadian military personnel meanwhile have been filing reports for more than 70 years, including sightings from as recently as Nov. 2008 and July 2021. CTVNews.ca previously reported that former Canadian defence minister Harjit Sajjan received a UAP briefing from Canadian defence officials in May 2021, which was followed by a briefing for Transport Minister Omar Alghabra's staff in May 2022.

In Canada, police officers, air traffic controllers and pilots on medical, cargo and passenger flights operated by WestJet, Air Canada Express, Porter Airlines, Delta and more have also filed unusual reports over the past three decades. In most cases, there is little to no official follow-up. Transport Canada, which operates the online aviation incident database where these reports are found, cautions that they "contain preliminary, unconfirmed data which can be subject to change."

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