What Really Happened in Banffshire's UFO Record?

Banffshire’s UFO record is not built around one famous crash story or a large “flap” like Scotland’s better-known Bonnybridge reports.

Preview for What Really Happened in Banffshire's UFO Record?

Introduction

For this page, Banffshire means the historic Scottish county: a Moray Firth county running from the coast around Banff, Portsoy, Cullen and Buckie inland towards Speyside and the Cairngorms. That matters because modern addresses may now fall under Aberdeenshire or Moray, while older records, lieutenancy references and MoD sighting tables may still use “Banffshire”. The historic county ceased to be used for local government in 1975, and since 1996 the area has been split mainly between the Aberdeenshire and Moray council areas. [Wikipedia]WikipediaOpen source on wikipedia.org.

Overview image for What Really Happened in Banffshire's UFO...

What counts as Banffshire in UFO records?

Banffshire is a good example of why historic county geography needs care in UFO work. The project’s map framework follows historic counties, and the Wikimedia Commons historic-county SVG set includes Banffshire as one of the UK’s mapped historic counties. Wikishire describes Banffshire as a shire on the Moray Firth stretching inland up the Spey valley into the Grampian and Cairngorm mountains, with Banff as county town. [Wikimedia Commons]commons.wikimedia.orgCategory:SVG maps of historic counties of the United KingdomCategory:SVG maps of historic counties of the United Kingdom

Modern administration can blur the evidence. A sighting listed as Banff, Banffshire in a 2000 MoD table is straightforward for this page. A report from Tomintoul, historically in Banffshire but now commonly associated with Moray council-area geography and the Cairngorms, is still relevant here when the source itself labels the county as Banffshire. Nearby reports from Elgin, Lossiemouth, Spey Bay or RAF Lossiemouth may help explain flight paths or regional patterns, but they should not be silently treated as Banffshire cases unless the geography or source label supports that reading.

Banffshire’s boundaries have also shifted historically. The Lord-Lieutenant of Banffshire notes that the county’s boundaries moved on several occasions, especially in the west between Keith, Portgordon and the Spey, and that it once had detached portions within Aberdeenshire. Scotland’s People similarly notes that Banff county, also known as Banffshire, had its boundaries altered by the Boundary Commissioners in 1891 and that counties as local government areas were abolished in Scotland in 1975. [LordLieutenantBanff]lordlieutenantbanffshire.co.ukOpen source on lordlieutenantbanffshire.co.uk.

The clearest official Banffshire sightings

The best-documented Banffshire entries in public official records are not long case files. They are short lines in MoD annual sighting tables. That is important: these records show that reports were received, but they do not by themselves establish what was seen.

On 11 February 2000, the MoD’s “UFO Report 2000” recorded two separate entries for Banff, Banffshire, close together in time. At 18:05, a witness reported one object, visible mainly as light, “shrouded in a sort of mist”, with purple light for about five seconds and a very deep blue colour. At 18:20, another Banff entry described two star-like objects, the larger apparently emitting a cone-shaped pinkish light beam. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk.

The timing makes these entries interesting, but also difficult. Two reports in the same town within fifteen minutes could suggest a shared stimulus: a bright astronomical object, aircraft lighting through cloud, searchlight-like atmospheric effects, or simply two witnesses interpreting the same sky conditions differently. The MoD table does not provide witness names, precise viewing direction, weather, duration beyond the brief description, or any radar or aviation follow-up. Without those details, the reports remain unresolved in the limited sense that the public record does not identify a cause, not in the stronger sense that ordinary explanations have been ruled out.

A later Banffshire entry appears in the MoD’s 2009 report. On 11 May 2009, Tomintoul, Banffshire, was listed with an undated time: “Like a star, but jumping all over the sky”, around 70 degrees above the horizon, blue-white with occasional red and leaving a light trail. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009

That description fits a common UFO-report problem: a point-like light high in the sky can be hard to judge for distance, speed and motion. Apparent “jumping” can be caused by eye movement, atmospheric shimmer, cloud gaps, binocular or camera shake, or a genuine moving source such as an aircraft or satellite. The colour changes are also not unusual in reports of bright stars or planets near unstable air, although the Tomintoul entry’s mention of a light trail leaves room for other possibilities such as aircraft, meteor-like perception, or a brief optical effect. The public record is too thin to choose confidently between them.

What Really Happened in Banffshire's UFO... illustration 1

Why Banffshire has aviation relevance but no major UFO base story

Banffshire is not a blank patch of sky history. RAF Banff, also known locally as Boyndie, was built during the Second World War and officially opened in April 1943. The Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust describes Banff/Boyndie as a Coastal Command airfield that opened under Flying Training Command before later wartime use. [Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust]abct.org.ukbanff boyndiebanff boyndie

The surviving built environment underlines the aviation connection. Historic Environment Scotland’s record for the Boyndie control tower says that on 1 September 1944 RAF Banff was taken over by 18 Group Coastal Command under Group Captain Max Aitken, and that a multi-national strike wing operated from Boyndie, including Norwegian, RAF and Royal Canadian Air Force squadrons attacking German surface vessels and U-boats in the North Sea and along the Norwegian coast. [Historic Environment Scotland]portal.historicenvironment.scotOpen source on historicenvironment.scot.

This matters for UFO history because aviation-linked places often attract later speculation. Airfields, radar sites, coastal patrol routes, military exercises and low-flying aircraft all provide plausible reasons for unusual lights or sounds. But in Banffshire’s case, the known RAF Banff story is mainly wartime and heritage-related. It does not, on the available public evidence, create a strong post-war UFO case comparable with radar-visual incidents at active air defence sites elsewhere in the UK.

The more relevant modern aviation context lies just outside or near the historic county, especially Moray and the wider north-east flight environment. Reports from Spey Bay, Elgin or Lossiemouth can be regionally useful, but they should be handled as neighbouring-context evidence unless a specific case falls within historic Banffshire or is explicitly recorded that way. This distinction prevents a common UFO-writing error: borrowing nearby military glamour to strengthen a weak local case.

The 1954 “Lossiemouth to Buckie” contactee tale is nearby, famous, and badly weakened

One north-east Scotland story often drifts towards Banffshire because it was said to have occurred “between Lossiemouth and Buckie”. Buckie is in historic Banffshire, while Lossiemouth is in Moray, so the alleged geography sits close to this page’s western coastal edge. The story appeared in Cedric Allingham’s 1954 book Flying Saucer from Mars, in which Allingham claimed to have encountered a Martian spacecraft and its occupant while on holiday near Lossiemouth. [Wikipedia]WikipediaCedric AllinghamCedric Allingham

For Banffshire readers, the point is not that this is a credible local landing case. It is almost the opposite. Later research treated “Cedric Allingham” as a fictional or disguised identity, and the episode has long been discussed as an elaborate hoax associated with Patrick Moore and Peter Davies, although Moore denied involvement. Encyclopedia.com summarises the later exposure through Christopher Allan and Steuart Campbell’s 1986 work in Magonia, including Davies’s admission that he had been involved with the book and that the supposed author’s identity was false or staged. [Encyclopedia.com]encyclopedia.comOpen source on encyclopedia.com.

The Allingham story still has value in a Banffshire UFO history because it shows how quickly Scottish place names became props in the 1950s “contactee” era. It also marks a sharp difference between local witness reports and literary UFO claims. The 2000 and 2009 MoD entries are thin but recognisably administrative records of reported sightings. The Allingham tale is a published narrative with photographs and a claimed alien conversation, but later evidence strongly weakens it as testimony.

How Banffshire compares with Scotland’s better-known UFO areas

Banffshire is best understood as a low-volume county in the public UFO record. That is not a judgement on every witness; it is a judgement on the surviving evidence. Scotland has much louder UFO landmarks: the Livingston or Robert Taylor incident in West Lothian, the Calvine photograph in Perthshire, and the Bonnybridge/Falkirk Triangle claims in central Scotland. Bonnybridge, for example, has long been reported in the media as attracting claims of hundreds of sightings a year, whether or not those figures are independently robust. [The Guardian]theguardian.comThe Guardian Scots lead the way for UFO sightings | UK newsThe Guardian Scots lead the way for UFO sightings | UK news

The contrast helps set expectations. Banffshire does not currently offer a major police-investigated physical-trace case, a widely analysed photograph, or a large cluster of repeated reports in the public MoD tables. Its value is different: it shows the quieter end of the British UFO archive, where a few terse entries preserve local moments of puzzlement but do not support a dramatic county mythology.

This also means Banffshire should not be written up as “Scotland’s hidden UFO hotspot”. The more honest interpretation is that it is a historically interesting county with some official UFO-report traces, a strong aviation heritage at RAF Banff, and a coastal and upland environment where ordinary but impressive sky phenomena can look strange.

What Really Happened in Banffshire's UFO... illustration 2

Why ordinary explanations matter here

The most useful sceptical approach to Banffshire is not to dismiss witnesses, but to ask what information is missing. The MoD’s public tables often record date, time, place, county and a brief description. They rarely provide enough detail to test wind direction, aircraft movements, astronomical positions, cloud type, radar data, or corroboration by independent witnesses.

Several common explanations are especially relevant to Banffshire’s landscape:

Bright stars and planets. The Royal Museums Greenwich notes that Venus is so bright that, especially when low and twinkling, it can produce flashing colour effects and be reported as a peculiar object or UFO. That does not automatically explain the Banff or Tomintoul reports, but it is a serious possibility for star-like lights, colour changes and apparent hovering. [Royal Museums Greenwich]rmg.co.ukOpen source on rmg.co.uk.

Aircraft and military or civil traffic. North-east Scotland has a long aviation history, and modern flight activity around Moray and Aberdeenshire can produce lights that appear to hover, merge, separate or vanish, especially when aircraft are turning, approaching head-on, disappearing behind cloud, or changing intensity.

Lantern-like orange lights. The 2009 MoD records across the UK contain many orange-light reports, and some entries themselves mention possible Chinese lanterns or lantern-like descriptions. That national pattern matters because Banffshire’s 2009 Tomintoul report sits within a year when the MoD received a large volume of public UFO reports and many involved lights rather than structured craft. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukufo report 2009ufo report 2009

Coastal mirage effects. Banffshire’s Moray Firth coast is a natural setting for optical oddities. A Fata Morgana is a superior mirage seen in a narrow band above the horizon, where distant objects such as ships or coastlines can appear distorted, lifted or stacked by temperature layers in the air. Aviation safety resource SKYbrary describes it as a complex superior mirage above the horizon; such effects do not explain high-altitude star-like reports, but they are relevant to coastal “floating” or oddly shaped distant-object claims. [Skybrary]skybrary.aeroOpen source on skybrary.aero.

Lenticular and mountain-wave cloud. Banffshire reaches inland towards the Grampian and Cairngorm mountains, a terrain context where unusual cloud forms can appear. Lenticular clouds are widely noted for their smooth, lens-like shapes and their tendency to be mistaken for UFOs, particularly near mountainous terrain. [AccuWeather]accuweather.comOpen source on accuweather.com.

What the MoD records do — and do not — prove

The MoD’s UFO records are important because they show that members of the public did report sightings, and that those reports entered a government system. GOV.UK hosts annual UFO reports from 1997 to 2009, while The National Archives explains that the Ministry of Defence kept UFO records for decades and that many describe shapes, lights and flashes, often explainable, with some more unusual. [GOV.UK]GOV.UKufo reports in the ukufo reports in the uk

But the official label “UFO report” does not mean the MoD endorsed an extraordinary interpretation. It usually means an object or light was unidentified to the witness, and sometimes remained unidentified in the file because no detailed investigation or conclusive explanation was recorded. In December 2024, a parliamentary written answer stated that the MOD ceased investigating UFO or UAP reports in 2009, had not classified new material on the subject since, and had released its UFO files created up to 2009 to The National Archives. [UK Parliament]questions-statements.parliament.ukOpen source on parliament.uk.

The closure of the UFO desk is central to interpreting Banffshire’s later record. The National Archives’ 2013 release material says the final files covered the last two years of the MoD UFO desk, including policy, correspondence, Freedom of Information responses and sighting reports; a transcript from the same release says the desk and hotline closed in November 2009, ending almost 60 years of collecting and analysing such reports. [National Archives]cdn.nationalarchives.gov.ukufo highlights guide 2013ufo highlights guide 2013

That leaves Banffshire in a familiar position for UK county UFO history: the public can point to specific official entries, but the entries are usually too compressed to settle the event. A good local assessment therefore separates three categories: documented reports, plausible explanations, and genuinely unresolved details. Banffshire has documented reports; it does not currently have a strong public case where extraordinary possibilities survive detailed official, photographic, radar and witness scrutiny.

What Really Happened in Banffshire's UFO... illustration 3

A balanced assessment of Banffshire’s UFO history

Banffshire’s UFO history is modest but not empty. The most concrete local evidence consists of official MoD sighting-table entries from Banff in February 2000 and Tomintoul in May 2009. These are legitimate archival traces, but they are not landmark incidents. They preserve brief witness descriptions of unusual lights and motion, without the supporting detail needed for a robust conclusion. [GOV.UK]assets.publishing.service.gov.ukOpen source on service.gov.uk.

The county’s aviation history gives the subject local texture. RAF Banff at Boyndie was a significant wartime airfield, and the north-east coast has long been tied to military, maritime and aviation activity. That context makes the sky above Banffshire interesting, but it also supplies many non-exotic possibilities for misidentification. [Airfields of Britain Conservation Trust]abct.org.ukbanff boyndiebanff boyndie

The nearby Allingham/Lossiemouth-to-Buckie story is a useful warning. It is colourful, local enough to be relevant, and historically important in British UFO culture, but its credibility has been heavily undermined by later hoax research. Banffshire’s stronger record is less dramatic and more documentary: short MoD entries, careful geography, and restrained interpretation. [Wikipedia]WikipediaCedric AllinghamCedric Allingham

For readers asking “what really happened in Banffshire?”, the most honest answer is: people reported puzzling lights, the MoD logged some of them, and the public evidence does not prove unusual craft. The county is better read as a small but useful part of the UK’s official UFO-reporting landscape than as a hidden centre of extraordinary activity.

Amazon book picks

Further Reading

Books and field guides related to What Really Happened in Banffshire's UFO Record?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.

BookCover for The UFO Experience

The UFO Experience

By Joseph Allen Hynek

Provides a framework for assessing sightings, classifications, and unexplained aerial reports similar to those discussed on the page.

BookCover for UFOs

UFOs

By Leslie Kean

Matches the page's emphasis on official records, witness reports, and government documentation rather than sensational claims.

BookCover for The UFO Files

The UFO Files

By David Clarke

Directly aligns with UK Ministry of Defence files and the documentary approach used in examining Banffshire reports.

eBay marketplace picks

Marketplace Samples

Example marketplace items related to this page. Use the search link to explore similar finds on eBay.

Using USA

Endnotes

  1. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a78cd1d40f0b6324769a45e/UFOReport2000.pdf

  2. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: ufo report 2009
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7582c440f0b6397f35efcb/ufo_report_2009.pdf

  3. Source: Wikipedia
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banffshire

  4. Source: scotlandspeople.gov.uk
    Link: https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/content/banff-county

  5. Source: commons.wikimedia.org
    Title: Category:SVG maps of historic counties of the United Kingdom
    Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category%3ASVG_maps_of_historic_counties_of_the_United_Kingdom

  6. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: Cedric Allingham
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cedric_Allingham

  7. Source: encyclopedia.com
    Link: https://www.encyclopedia.com/science/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/allingham-cedric

  8. Source: news.sky.com
    Title: ufo desk why mod shut real life x files 10442364
    Link: https://news.sky.com/story/ufo-desk-why-mod-shut-real-life-x-files-10442364

  9. Source: skybrary.aero
    Link: https://skybrary.aero/articles/fata-morgana

  10. Source: accuweather.com
    Link: https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/lenticular-clouds-sometimes-mistaken-for-ufos-are-in-a-league-of-their-own/1694242

  11. Source: GOV.UK
    Title: ufo reports in the uk
    Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/ufo-reports-in-the-uk

  12. Source: nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/explore-the-collection/explore-by-time-period/postwar/ufo-reports/

  13. Source: questions-statements.parliament.uk
    Link: https://questions-statements.parliament.uk/written-questions/detail/2024-12-05/18321/

  14. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Title: ufo highlights guide 2013
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/ufo-highlights-guide-2013.pdf

  15. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Title: ufo video transcript
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/ufo-video-transcript.pdf

  16. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: Calvine UFO photograph
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvine_UFO_photograph

  17. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: UFO sightings in the United Kingdom
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UFO_sightings_in_the_United_Kingdom

  18. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: Lakenheath Bentwaters incident
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lakenheath-Bentwaters_incident

  19. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: Project Condign
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Condign

  20. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: RAF Banff
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAF_Banff

  21. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: Fata Morgana (mirage)
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fata_Morgana_%28mirage%29

  22. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: Lenticular cloud
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenticular_cloud

  23. Source: assets.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Title: 20140624 FOI 01746 Rendlesham UFO Incident1980
    Link: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a7e4e1de5274a2e8ab47283/20140624_FOI_01746_Rendlesham_UFO_Incident1980.pdf

  24. Source: discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/a/A13532575

  25. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/final-tranche-of-UFO-files-released.pdf

  26. Source: nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/ufos/

  27. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/mar-2009-highlights-guide.pdf

  28. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/ufo-files-reveal-behind-the-scenes-of-the-ufo-desk.pdf

  29. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/aug-2009-research-guide.pdf

  30. Source: webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Title: Unidentified Aerial Phenomenauap In The Uk Air Defence Region
    Link: https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20121110115327/http%3A/www.mod.uk/DefenceInternet/FreedomOfInformation/PublicationScheme/SearchPublicationScheme/UnidentifiedAerialPhenomenauapInTheUkAirDefenceRegion.htm

  31. Source: cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk
    Link: https://cdn.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documents/the-ufo-files-extract.pdf

  32. Source: archive.org
    Title: condign vol 2 1 258
    Link: https://archive.org/details/condign-vol-2-1-258

  33. Source: commons.wikimedia.org
    Title: Category:Maps of traditional counties of Scotland
    Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category%3AMaps_of_traditional_counties_of_Scotland

  34. Source: commons.wikimedia.org
    Title: Category:Old maps of Banffshire
    Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category%3AOld_maps_of_Banffshire

  35. Source: commons.wikimedia.org
    Title: Category:SVG maps of historic counties of Scotland
    Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category%3ASVG_maps_of_historic_counties_of_Scotland

  36. Source: commons.wikimedia.org
    Title: File:Banffshire County.svg
    Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ABanffshire_County.svg

  37. Source: commons.wikimedia.org
    Title: File:BANFFSHIRE Civil Parish map.jpg
    Link: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ABANFFSHIRE_Civil_Parish_map.jpg

  38. Source: api.parliament.uk
    Title: unidentified flying objects
    Link: https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1979/jan/18/unidentified-flying-objects

  39. Source: hansard.parliament.uk
    Title: uk Unidentified Flying Objects
    Link: https://hansard.parliament.uk/lords/1979-01-18/debates/31155733-007e-46ad-b513-80f1c726a4a3/UnidentifiedFlyingObjects

  40. Source: inverclyde.gov.uk
    Title: PUBLIC Environment & Regeneration Agenda
    Link: https://www.inverclyde.gov.uk/meetings/documents/9683/PUBLIC%20Environment%20%26%20Regeneration%20Agenda.pdf

  41. Source: archives.gov
    Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/topics/uaps/rg-collections

  42. Source: archives.gov
    Link: https://www.archives.gov/research/topics/uaps

  43. Source: content.time.com
    Link: https://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0%2C28804%2C2072479_2072478_2072500%2C00.html

  44. Source: her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk
    Link: https://her.aberdeenshire.gov.uk/Monument/MAB17645

  45. Source: accuweather.com
    Title: fata morgana ship seen hovering off coast england
    Link: https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/fata-morgana-ship-seen-hovering-off-coast-england/943697

  46. Source: met.police.uk
    Link: https://www.met.police.uk/advice/advice-and-information/drones/drones/

  47. Source: wikishire.co.uk
    Link: https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Banffshire

  48. Source: lordlieutenantbanffshire.co.uk
    Link: https://www.lordlieutenantbanffshire.co.uk/historic-county-of-banffshire

  49. Source: abct.org.uk
    Title: banff boyndie
    Link: https://www.abct.org.uk/airfields/banff-boyndie/

  50. Source: portal.historicenvironment.scot
    Link: https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/apex/f?p=1505%3A300%3A%3A%3A%3A%3AVIEWTYPE%2CVIEWREF%3Adesignation%2CLB49835

  51. Source: theguardian.com
    Title: The Guardian Scots lead the way for UFO sightings | UK news
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2002/jun/24/kirstyscott

  52. Source: rmg.co.uk
    Link: https://www.rmg.co.uk/stories/space-astronomy/planet-venus

  53. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/RealCounties/photos/the-county-of-aberdeen-is-a-shire-in-the-highlands-of-scotlandit-borders-five-ot/614063817543856/

  54. Source: theguardian.com
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/feb/11/what-really-happened-in-calvine-the-mystery-behind-the-best-ufo-picture-ever-seen

  55. Source: theguardian.com
    Title: ufos aliens di55 mod
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/mar/22/ufos-aliens-di55-mod

  56. Source: theguardian.com
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2003/jul/06/paulharris.theobserver

  57. Source: theguardian.com
    Title: last release mod ufo files
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2013/jun/21/last-release-mod-ufo-files

  58. Source: theguardian.com
    Link: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2007/feb/22/freedomofinformation.it

  59. Source: gazetteer.org.uk
    Link: https://gazetteer.org.uk/place/Banffshire

  60. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/reel/DXR2g73E0J-/?hl=en

  61. Source: lordlieutenantbanffshire.co.uk
    Link: https://www.lordlieutenantbanffshire.co.uk/banffshire-and-morayshire-map

  62. Source: ebay.co.uk
    Title: Cedric Allingham
    Link: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/197767388863?mkevt=1&mkcid=1&mkrid=710-53481-19255-0&campid=5339151051&customid=endnote-source&toolid=10001

  63. Source: hangar1publishing.com
    Title: ufo hotspot
    Link: https://hangar1publishing.com/blogs/ufos-uaps-and-aliens/ufo-hotspot?srsltid=AfmBOopvPbRacoB6t5ooVa-jcppz-kj_MuqXPzkcXKt_LgBNBXi4GUyR

  64. Source: rmg.co.uk
    Link: https://www.rmg.co.uk/whats-on/online/members-lecture-venus-jupiters-close-encounter

Additional References

  1. Source: youtube.com
    Title: Exploring Scotlands Hidden History RAF-Banff: Forgotten Airfields of the, UK
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcFuSf_AjFs
    Source snippet

    The Lossiemouth Incident Part 1: A Man From Another Planet (Paranormal & Mystery)...

  2. Source: youtube.com
    Title: Exploring Portsoy, Scotland | A Hidden Gem on the Moray Firth
    Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwH2yFElpOM
    Source snippet

    Cullen Views, Morayshire - May 2026 - DJI AIR3 4K 60fps...

    Published: May 2026

  3. Source: academia.edu
    Link: https://www.academia.edu/77211053/The_British_Mod_Study_Project_Condign

  4. Source: researchgate.net
    Link: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/371163445_The_Scientific_Investigation_of_Unidentified_Aerial_Phenomena_UAP_Using_Multimodal_Ground-Based_Observatories

  5. Source: academia.edu
    Link: https://www.academia.edu/45497950/Timeline_of_World_Wierdness

  6. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/edinburghlivenews/posts/a-flashing-flying-object-was-recorded-in-the-west-lothian-sky-with-an-observer-b/1324332819738011/

  7. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/eveningtele/posts/a-photo-of-an-alleged-perthshire-ufo-sighting-has-been-revealed-after-32-years/5313705302011840/

  8. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/DR4srSECA0o/

  9. Source: rafbanfftrust.org
    Link: https://www.rafbanfftrust.org/shop/banffstrikewingatwar.html

  10. Source: gbmaps.com
    Link: https://www.gbmaps.com/free-county-maps/Banffshire.php

Topic Tree

Follow this branch

Related pages 91

More on this topic 4