Fishermen and police along a quiet Canadian harbor watched a glowing object plunge into the ocean — and then float silently on the water.
March 6, 2026
On the evening of March 6, 1967, residents along the coast near Shag Harbour, Nova Scotia reported seeing a strange object streak across the night sky.
Witnesses described four bright orange lights arranged in a rectangular pattern, moving low and fast over the Atlantic shoreline. The object appeared to descend sharply before slamming into the water just offshore.
Several people immediately called the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).
The Object Hits the Water
RCMP officers arrived within minutes.
According to their reports, the witnesses all described the same thing: a glowing object that appeared to crash into the harbor roughly 800 meters offshore.
When responders looked out over the water, they saw something unusual.
A yellowish light floating on the surface, surrounded by what looked like foam or strange residue.
Fearing an aircraft crash, authorities quickly organized a search.
The Search Begins
The Canadian Coast Guard and local fishing boats moved into the harbor to investigate the crash site.
But when search crews reached the area, the object — or whatever had been glowing on the surface — was gone.
Divers searched the seabed.
Nothing was found.
No wreckage.
No debris.
No aircraft.
An Unexplained Incident
The case was later investigated by the Royal Canadian Air Force and officially recorded as a UFO incident.
The object seen falling into the harbor on March 6, 1967 was never identified.
More than half a century later, the Shag Harbour incident remains one of the few UFO cases formally documented by the Canadian government as unexplained.

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