Angels' Hair Reports Index Page -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- May 13, October 13, 1917. Fatima, Portugal (1) On two occasions, a substance resembling angels' hair floated earthward. |Disk|Sphere|Buzz|Explosion|Flash|Glowing|Maneuver|Rotation| July 19, 1951. Puerto Maldonado, Peru Domingo Troncoso, customs officer in Puerto Maldonado, in the border of Peru and Bolivia, noticed a big airship shaped object flying low and horizontally in the afternoon, going from right to left. The object left a dense smoke trail, vapor or some similar thick and white substance. It was expelled from the rear end of the object while it flew. That the object was a real and structured machine can be seen by its reflection on the waters of the Madre de Dios river down below. Mr. Troncoso managed to get a camera and could take one good shot of the cigar-shaped object. Photograph published in a newspaper on July 6, 1952. |Cigar|Smoke| October 17, 1952. Oloron, France (1) The objects left a trail of angels' hair behind them, which drifted down in large quantities. |Cylinder|Sphere|Maneuver|Rings|Smoke|Tilt| October 27, 1952. Gaillac, France (1) Large quantities of angels' hair fell earthward. |Cigar|Cylinder|Sphere|Hover|Maneuver|Smoke|Tilt| October 30, November 6, 1964. Rome, Italy (7) A few minutes later, the objects returned in various formations, though this time they were not over the Vatican. A shiny, flamentous material later dubbed "angel hair" reportedly fell from the sky on this occasion, but evaporated within a few hours. Similar events, including another fall of "angel hair," allegedly occured the following day. |Formation|Speed| October 11, 1977. Union City, CA 12 objects in clusters of three, emitting a white substance like spider webs. This is known in Ufology as Angel Hair. |Scramble| -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- In almost half of the cases, it has been seen descnding from cigar-shaped UFOs which have cloudlike formations under or around them. They dissolve upon contact with the ground. Examination of several samples indicate it is similar in composition to borosilicate glass. (1) |Cigar| This Page is an antiquarian - possibly outdated - usergenerated website brought to you by an archive. It was mirrored from Geocities in the end of october 2009. For any questions about this page try to contact the respective author. For any questions concerning the archive visit our main page: OoCities.org. To report any mal content send URL to oocities[at]gmail[dot]com