In the Liverpool region, the inhabitants frequently report having seen unidentified flying objects (UFO) in the sky.Simple fantasy or hidden reality, the question of whether man is really alone in the universe fascinates as much as she worries.
Imagine an extraterrestrial life causes completely contradictory emotions in man.The primary feeling of fear and paranoia often mixes with a form of wonder and mysterious fascination - these same emotions which make the phenomenon of UFOs fascinating since the dawn of time.Horizontal lines floating in the sky, strange lights moving in a way that defies the understanding of the laws of physics ... The inhabitants of the county of Merseyside very frequently bring back "proofs" of a life beyond ourland borders.
Although neither scientists nor any average citizen have formally proven to pass an extraterrestrial life, testimonies as to the presence of unidentified objects in the sky flock from the four corners of the world.But some regions seem more conducive to the exploration of these unexplained phenomena.In its columns, the Liverpool Echo reports more than a dozen UFO observations over the years, including five in the past year, in the Liverpool region.
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UFO fever took Great Britain in the 1960s and seems to have particularly infected the regions of Liverpool, Merseyside and Wirral.The city of northwestern England has since been known to be a particularly conducive to observation and prized of extraterrestrial lovers.Enthusiasts of the subject even go so far as to evoke the presence of a "Bermuda triangle" in the region.Some of these testimonies, although questionable, have been officially recorded, gathered and published on the government's website dedicated to UFO observation in the United Kingdom since 1997.
The official registers show that there would have been 33 UFO observations in the Merseyside between 1997 and 2009. But by looking in the archives of the local Liverpool newspaper, we realize that unexplained phenomena have started to occur decadesBefore the archives were set up.
One of the first significant observations in the region was reported to the newspapers in May 1966. Later in the year, a certain Peter Murphy made the headlines of Liverpool Echo after claiming to have seen a UFO near Croxtteth Hall.But Peter's observation was only a precursor of October 1967, where a strange event will resonate in the streets of Hough Green, a small village near Widnes.During the night of October 5, a strange noise is recorded on a tape recorder by several inhabitants.Called the "Hough Green Hum", the sound will be described by those who heard it as seeming to be a combination of roar, buzzing and squeaky, emanating from an unknown point of the atmosphere.His din would have been such that he would have pushed a man to jump into a hedge.
More recently, Donald Cameron, a police officer, would have spotted six white lights moving in the sky, as well as what he considers to be a "mother" spaceship.Liverpool port workers have also faced a phenomenon that many are not explained.One of them managed to film an orange object spinning in the sky.Was it a plane?Or a comet?No explanation seems to be consensus yet.