YEAR DOSSIER

1992 UAP Cases

Every indexed UAP case documented in 1992, drawn from publicly available official government records — NARA RG 615, AARO, NASA, FBI, and DoD PURSUE program releases.

4 INCIDENTS · YEAR-BASED ARCHIVE HUB
DoD Orb / Sphere
CONFIDENTIAL
DoD-B9-024 · 1992-03-24

Bonnybridge Scotland Wave 1992

Bonnybridge, Falkirk, Scotland

Bonnybridge, Scotland became the epicenter of one of Europe's most sustained UAP waves from 1992 onward. Thousands of residents reported sightings over months and years. The area of central Scotland known as the Falkirk Triangle experienced some of the highest sustained UAP report rates ever documented in a civilian area.

HOVERINGFORMATIONRAPID ACCELERATION
PARTIAL
◈ MEDIA
OPEN DOSSIER →
DoD Orb / Sphere
SECRET
DoD-B13-023 · 1992-07-29

Clark Air Base Philippine Sea Encounter 1992

Philippine Sea, former Clark Air Base area

Just months after Mount Pinatubo's eruption closed Clark Air Base, residual USAF personnel and Philippine Air Force units observed a sustained UAP encounter over the Philippine Sea. The encounter was classified under post-Clark transition protocols and routed to Pacific Air Forces.

HOVERINGRAPID ACCELERATION
PARTIAL
◈ MEDIA
OPEN DOSSIER →
DoD Triangular
UNCLASSIFIED
DoD-B16-004 · 1992-12-04

Scotland Bonnybridge Triangle Wave 1992

Bonnybridge, Falkirk, Scotland

Thousands of residents of Bonnybridge and the Falkirk area of Scotland reported encounters with triangular and other shaped craft between 1992 and 1994. Falkirk District Councillor Billy Buchanan led a delegation to the Scottish Office and subsequently to Downing Street demanding official investigation. Scotland's Parliament received formal petitions. The Bonnybridge Triangle wave is the UK's most politically active community response to a UAP wave.

HOVERINGFORMATIONANTI GRAVITY
PARTIAL
◈ MEDIA
OPEN DOSSIER →
DoD Disc / Saucer
SECRET
DoD-B16-006 · 1992-09-03

Republic of China Air Force IDF Prototype Encounter 1992

Taiwan Strait, Taiwan

During testing of the new Indigenous Defence Fighter prototype over the Taiwan Strait, the test aircraft's state-of-the-art AIDC radar was defeated by an unknown disc-shaped contact that performed 90-degree turns at 30,000 feet. The encounter was classified by the ROCAF and only emerged through Taiwan defence research community contacts in the 2000s.

RAPID ACCELERATION90 DEGREE TURNSSENSOR INTERFERENCE
MODERATE
◈ MEDIA
OPEN DOSSIER →
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