Seems to me, the latest would be a tough one to dispell. Anytime there is loss of Human Life, it brings a new level to skeptisism http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,534960,00.html?test=latestnews
I saw a movie about it awhile back. I think the name of it was Thunderball. Seriously, there's a logical explanation: rapture of the deep http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogen_narcosis It would also explain the deaths. At 160 feet there's no telling what kind of hallucinations a person might have. That's pretty deep.
Interesting, when the claims are made by military folks, it makes it harder to write it off as misidentification. I've read a of a few incidents involving the US, British and Canadian militaries. Shag Harbor would be one good example, though it doesn't necessarily mean it was a UFO.
Well it definitely wasn't that, L2G.....because it wasn't FLYING !!!! It was a USO - it was swimming.
Actually, the reports that I read said that it was initially reported as an airplane crash because several witnesses (including Canadian mounties) saw what they believed to be an aircraft crash into the waters of Shag Harbor. It was dark, they saw lights and assumed that what they were seeing was a terrestrial craft. Reports say that the object was tracked from the Siberia region via radar until the time it "crashed". The Canadian government sent search and rescue crews to look for survivors and recover any debris and found nothing, though some reports mention a foamy like substance and one witness says they recovered shiny metal. The craft was then tracked moving under water and traveling 30 miles north to a city called Shelburne where it came to rest for several days and was joined by another "craft". After a few days the crafts (or lights) were seen moving at a high rate of speed out of the water and into the sky until they disappeared from view.
You know your people . All kidding aside having lived in Iceland for 18 months drinking is the main passtime in those cold yonders. Many an UFO sighting has been made under those conditions.Sometimes the moon comes so close you feel you can touch it and those northern lights called the aurora borealis look like a psychedelic show.