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Hundreds spot UFOs in Canadian skies: report

Last Updated: Tuesday, April 10, 2007 | 9:42 AM CT

More than 700 people reported seeing unidentified flying objects in the Canadian skies in 2006, according to one of the country's leading UFO researchers.

Winnipegger Chris Rutkowski, who compiles an annual survey of sightings for the Winnipeg-based Ufology Research of Manitoba, said the number is the third-highest in the 17 years of the report's history.

"The fact that these numbers are so high at all suggests that it's a very real phenomenon," Rutkowski said after releasing the latest report on Sunday.

"Whether it's something that's tangible, like a flying saucer from another planet, or something a little less so, perhaps psychology-driven, it still is fascinating, and I think science should be paying a little more attention to it."

Most cases: lights in the night sky

British Columbia accounted for 28 per cent of the sightings, which the report noted is a substantial over-representation based on population alone.

Saskatchewan posted an all-time record of 98 sightings, more than half of them from the tiny town of Maidstone, just east of the Alberta border.

The most mysterious cases include a huge, black, V-shaped object moving slowly over the Newfoundland coastline last August.

Another reported by a driver outside North Bay, Ont., involved several blue lights that zipped closely past the witness's car and hovered in the trees.

In Rutkowski's report, the working definition of a UFO is "an object seen in the sky which its observer cannot identify." The typical sighting, the report says, is that of two people together who observe a moving, distant white or red light for several minutes.

About two-thirds of the reported cases in 2006 were classified as lights seen in the night sky. Slightly less than three per cent of cases involved a "close encounter," most of them involving a person who saw a UFO at close range. One case involved reported contact or abduction.

In most cases, reported UFO sightings are eventually identified as conventional objects, such as an aircraft or astronomical object.

In the 2006 report, seven cases were classified as "high-quality unknowns," very unusual sightings made by reliable witnesses where no explanation could be found.

With files from the Canadian Press
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