Scotland UFO|UAP & Alien Sightings Archive — from the Island of Muck 1912 to Calvine 1990 and the Falkirk Triangle's 300+ annual sightings. Scotland's UAP record includes the only UFO case in British legal history investigated as a criminal assault, one of the clearest UAP photographs ever taken suppressed by the MOD for 32 years, and the pre-war archive's most extraordinary entity statement: others of our race will be coming.
Scotland UFO|UAP & Alien Sightings Archive
Scotland is one of the most anomalously active territories in the documented UAP and entity record — a country whose geological antiquity, remote Highland terrain, dense island chains, and centuries of oral tradition have produced a sighting history that runs from pre-modern entity encounters on isolated Hebridean beaches to one of the clearest UAP photographs ever taken, suppressed by the British Ministry of Defence for thirty-two years. The archive’s Scottish record spans more than a century of documented cases: the 1912 Island of Muck CE-III in which small bilingual men in green vests told two boys on a beach that others of our race will be coming; the 1913 Killary Harbor craft ditch in which three tall blond occupants ordered a witness away from their vessel in French; the 1979 Dechmont Law encounter in which forestry worker Robert Taylor was physically dragged toward a metallic sphere by two smaller probe objects — the only UFO case in British legal history to be investigated by police as an assault; the 1990 Calvine Perthshire sighting in which two men photographed a massive diamond-shaped craft hovering silently before ascending vertically, producing photographs so compelling the MOD suppressed them for thirty-two years and an RAF intelligence officer kept a personal copy hidden from his superiors. Scotland’s UAP record is not a collection of lights in the sky. It is a case-by-case archive of encounters that left physical evidence, legal records, government files, and witnesses who spent the rest of their lives certain of what they had seen.
Central Scotland’s Falkirk Triangle — the corridor between Bonnybridge, Stirling, and Fife — has generated more than 300 UAP reports annually since the early 1990s, earning Bonnybridge a designation alongside Roswell as one of the most concentrated UAP activity zones on Earth. Councillor Billy Buchanan personally appealed to three Prime Ministers for a formal investigation. The Ministry of Defence maintained that UK airspace had not been compromised. The sightings continued regardless. But Scotland’s UAP significance extends far beyond the Falkirk Triangle — from the Orkney fishing crew that encountered a mermaid rising from the Pentland Firth in 1913 to the 1914 Inverary CE-III in which a small figure healed a boy’s broken arm and identified itself as a gnome, from the Calvine diamond that hovered over Perthshire in 1990 to the ongoing documented activity across the Highlands, the Western Isles, and the Borders. Scotland watches the sky differently. The sky, the record suggests, watches Scotland back.
- 1598: Elf in Trei-Gruinard, Scotland
- 1648: Edinburgh, Scotland Close Encounter
- 1744: Marching AIR troops marching over Scotland
- 1746: Human Headed Dragon over Culloden, Scotland
- 1748: 3 Spheres over Culloden, Scotland
- 1800: Abduction in Colonsay Island, Inner Hebrides, Scotland
- 1809: Mermaid Sighting near Sandside, Caithness, Scotland
- 1811: Creature Spotted near Corphine, Kintyre, Scotland
- 1814: Mermaid off the West coast of Scotland
- 1814: Portgordon, Scotland Mermaid Sighting
- 1830: Mermaid near Benbecula, Outer Hebrides, Scotland
- 1833: Mermaid off of Isle of Yell, Scotland
- 1979: The Dechmont Woods Encounter
- 1991: Grangemouth Electric UFO Photo
- 1992: A70 Abduction Case – Revisited
- 1996: The Fife Incident
- 1997: Triangle in Scotland
- 2008: Edinburgh, Scotland Encounter
- 2008: Glasgow, Scotland Alien Encounter
- 2010: Red light over Falkirk
- 1996: CSETI expedition to Scotland – Triangle craft at distance
From the Island of Muck, Inner Hebrides, Scotland, 1912 — the parting words of small men in green vests to two boys on a beach:
“Others of our race will be coming.”