JUNE 22, 1976 - NORTH ATLANTIC
2113 - 2140 HOURS
2113: ORANGE GLOW BEHIND CLOUDS
2115: WHITE SPHERE OBSERVED ALT 10º, BEARING 290º
WHITE SPHERE DEVELOPED AS SHOWN
STARS COULD BE SEEN THROUGH SPHERE AT ALL TIMES
BY 2140 THE SPHERE HAD DISAPPEARED
Here is another sighting
closer to home. This incident was observed from a passing ship on June
22, 1976 in the North Atlantic, at about 2113-2140 hours. It is reported
in the Marine Observer, Vol. 47, 1977, p. 66.
First, an orange glow was sighted behind some distant clouds. A
couple of minutes later, a glowing white sphere of light was
observed to the left of the orange glow, just above the clouds. The
white sphere then slowly expanded to a much larger sphere, dimming as it
expanded. At its maximum size, the top of the white sphere reached about
24 degrees 30 minutes elevation angle to the observer. Development to
maximum size required about 10 minutes.
By 2140 hrs the sphere had faded and disappeared. The sphere was
sufficiently thin that the stars could be seen through it at all times.
Again, this incident strongly fits the large Tesla globe mode
of a Soviet scalar EM interferometer. The significance and
role of the orange glow are not known at this time.