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A new report details that the number of sightings of Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena is increasing as enthusiasts are searching for a chance to connect with the outrageous mysteries of the universe.

I often find myself searching the night skies, wondering if we are alone in the universe. I have had multiple experiences spotting what appeared to be cigar-shaped objects hovering in place. Others would usually discount them as balloons or planes, but I always believed.
For as long as I can remember, Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) or UAPs (unidentified anomalous phenomena), as they are now officially called, have captivated our imaginations. Growing up watching television shows like Lost in Space or The Jetsons, searching for life in another galaxy has always opened our fantasies of mysterious worlds. I am not alone in this dream, as I have compiled the world’s most popular UFO hotspots considered gateways to the unknown, where visitors can explore infinite possibilities.
UFO tourism is booming as UAP sightings are now more commonly featured in mainstream media. There are countless silly Alien festivals and conventions around the world, as well as serious gatherings of thought-provoking individuals providing the UFO community with further information.
Here are 15 UFO hotspots and attractions around the world for dreamers, seekers, and believers to explore the unknown and have some fun at the same time.
Illustration of a UFO over an empty desert road in California
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CALIFORNIA
The annual Contact in the Desert event takes place the last week of May in Joshua Tree and is touted as “the world’s largest UFO and UAP conference. Dedicated to exploring the frontiers of knowledge in UAP, Artificial Intelligence, the future of technology and space travel, non-human intelligence, spirituality, and health & wellness.” Speakers this year include Television adventurer Josh Gates.
Shilinxia UFO Glass Viewing Platform
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CHINA
The Shilinxia UFO Glass Viewing Platform is perched high on a cliff and offers visitors a thrilling experience of standing 250 feet above the ground with breathtaking 360-degree views. Its unique design resembles a flying disk or UFO, with an actual flying saucer piloted by a couple of aliens parked right in the middle of the glass platform.
UFO Watchtower attraction in Colorado’s San Luis Valley.
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COLORADO
The UFO Watchtower is Colorado's most unique roadside attraction. It invites extraterrestrial seekers and aficionados to the watchtower for a chance to spot an alien or UFO for themselves. This location has hosted numerous UFO sightings over the years, which could be possible thanks to the vast and unfiltered view of the night sky.
UFO trail sign at Rendlesham Forest, Suffolk, England
Universal Images Group via Getty Images
ENGLAND
The UFO Trail in Rendlesham Forest, Suffolk, was created after United States Air Force (USAF) security personnel stationed at nearby RAF Woodbridge reported seeing strange lights in the surrounding forest. The mystery of the sighting has continued ever since, and the three-mile trail was built to accommodate curiosity seekers.
Giant of the Atacama. Large petroglyph on a rocky outcrop in the Atacama Desert in the Tarapaca Region of northern Chile.
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CHILE
In Atacama, Chile, the Mars-like landscape gives way to the “Atacama Giant,” a massive alien-looking prehistoric artwork that stands 30 feet longer than a football field and is 390 feet tall. With more than 5,000 geoglyphs in the area, ancient astronaut theorists believe it was meant to signal extraterrestrial visitors similar to marks or on a runway.
A national UFO trail was created in San Clemente, Chile, leading to a unique formation known as El Enladrillado. There, 233 massive megaliths weighing ten tons apiece were erected like giant platforms in ancient times. Following a significant increase in sightings in 1997, the Committee for the Study of Anomalous Aerial Phenomena was created. The official body of the General Directorate of Civil Aeronautics, DGAC, studies anomalous aerial phenomena in Chilean airspace.
View of the Peña de Bernal, and the small 'magical town' of Bernal, in the Mexican state of Querétaro.
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MEXICO
Since 2022, La Rumorosa has been promoted as the “World Capital of the UFO Phenomenon.” A sign proudly announces this as you enter this Martian landscape because many sightings have occurred there. There is even an annual international festival — the World UFO Fest in March for UFO aficionados, which includes talks and seminars with “bioenergetic practices to facilitate contact with the beings of light” or “testing and vibrational balancing,” according to the website.
In San Sebastián Bernal, a gigantic monolith called Peña de Bernal towers over the town in the Mexican state of Querétaro. The area has reported UFO sightings and mysterious lights. Some believe that Chaneques (a small race of elves) call the monolith their home and must be kept happy by offering small gifts. Modern-day visitors have claimed that they have also seen “little people” on or around this gigantic rock in connection with UFO sightings.


NEVADA
Area 51 and the Extraterrestrial Highway, in Nevada is a U.S. military installation located north of Las Vegas and is commonly known to UFO conspiracy theorists as a location the U.S. government refused to acknowledge. They believe that the area is a storage facility for the examination of a crashed alien spacecraft including its occupants both living and dead as well as materials recovered at Roswell. They also believe the area is used to manufacture aircraft based on alien technology.
Some UFOlogists are now claiming a secret underground facility has been discovered in the base of the Papoose Mountains, in Lincoln County, Nevada, where recovered alien space crafts and extraterrestrial beings are kept hidden away and no longer at Area 51.
UFO fans often congregate at the popular Little A’Le’Inn bar and restaurant, the original Area 51 restaurant / bar / motel and take one of their popular tours along the route to Area 51 to see Indian Petroglyphs that resemble aliens; the mysterious dry lake where recent sightings of UFO’s have been observed, and the Black Mailbox, a sacred meeting place for UFO enthusiasts.
A welcom sign at the entry point of Roswell
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NEW MEXICO
Roswell, New Mexico, is synonymous with UFOs thanks to many historical UFO mysteries that allegedly occurred in 1948. In the northwestern part of the state near the Colorado border, there are well-known reports of a strange craft that crashed in Hart Canyon, followed by the military quickly descending upon the scene to remove the craft and the bodies of its crew away. The popular Alien Run Mountain Bike Trail was created to accommodate the Aztec Alien Run, which takes place annually in May, as bike riders descend on the region.
The area also offers the International UFO Museum and Research Center and the Roswell UFO Festival, which takes place in July every year and features otherworldly events, including the renowned Roswell Galacticon, the AlienFest, and the Roswell Film Festival.
A couple wearing silver alien costumes walk down McMinnville Oregon's mainstreet in the parade of the annual UFO Festival.
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OREGON
Seventy-five years ago, the tiny town of McMinnville, Oregon, was struck with UFO fever when a local couple spotted a flying disc over their farm, making national news. The McMinnville UFO Festival celebrates its 25th year with speakers, parties, an outrageous costumed parade, and even an Alien Abduction 5k Race.
The Spiral. Peru Nasca desert South America
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PERU
One of the most famous sites in the world is the Nasca Lines in Peru. The group of large carved geoglyphs located in Peru's Nasca Desert was believed to have been made by extraterrestrial visitors as landing spots, but they were more likely created by a pre-Incan civilization. Scientists using AI recently discovered 303 new geoglyphs, including abstract humanoid figures and ancient ceremonies. The best way to see the Nasca Lines is from the air. There are multiple daily flights, lasting about 75 minutes each, that depart from Pisco Airport.
3d illustration of UFO in the forest
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ROMANIA
In the famed region of Transylvania lies the Hoia-Baciu Forest. Aside from popular Dracula tourism in the area, the forest is filled with unexplained phenomena that thrill alien hunters. The area is known as "Romania's Bermuda Triangle" and "World's Most Haunted Forest." The so-called "dead zone," a circular area without vegetation, adds to the creepy forest surroundings and is also a hotbed for reported paranormal activity.
Rendering of being lost inside Molybka Triangle in Russia
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RUSSIA
The famous Perm Anomalous Zone is in a remote area near the Ural Mountains in Russia. The M Triangle is one of the most mysterious places in the world and was discovered in the 1980s. Witnesses report that their watches stop working, and there are sightings of bright, glowing colored lights in the sky. Ufologists consider this a sign of "underground fractures where intense energy is emitted. This wave duct for electromagnetic energy usually results in color, sound, and other phenomena."


SCOTLAND
Bonnybridge, Falkirk, is considered the UFO Capital of Scotland where numerous residents and UFO enthusiasts have come forward to share their personal experiences. With over 300 sightings of suspicious and unidentifiable flying objects each year, Bonnybridge has been nicknamed the ‘Scottish Roswell.’ Sightings of strange hovering lights, cigar-shaped flying objects, and UFOs have regularly frightened motorists. Some have even claimed to have been kidnapped by alien entities in the Falkirk Triangle before being whisked away onto flying saucers for further examination.
View from Marfa, Texas Observatory on the edge of Highway 90.
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TEXAS
For more than 135 years, mysterious glowing orbs have appeared here in the night sky. Known as the Marfa Lights, these strange lights are one of the most unexplained mysteries in the world. The Marfa Ghost Lights, date back to the 19th century, when indigenous tribes told stories of the phenomena. The lights have many colors and appear to hover or bob erratically. The popular music-filled Marfa Lights Festival also takes place in August.
Skinwalker Ranch
Image courtesy of Prometheus Entertainment
UTAH
Vernal is historically known for its strange sightings and dinosaur fossils. An area filled with ghost towns, and otherworldly rock features. It is located near Skinwalker Ranch, a 500-acre ranch so strange it inspired its own television series. The ranch owners have reported tales of UFOs, Bigfoot-like creatures, strange orbs, creatures with glowing eyes, and other paranormal activities. It is now privately owned and not open to the public.
On the north side of ranch and its popular UFO Alley is Blind Frog Ranch. It’s the subject of the Discovery Channel’s "The Mystery of Blind Frog Ranch," another show searching for answers about the alien desert landscape.
The Utah desert has long been a hotspot for UFO encounters for many years, and the Utah UFO Festival attracts fans every June to participate in lectures, costume contests, and extraterrestrial movies.
A small drone flies in front of the skyline of midtown Manhattan and the Empire State Building.
Getty Images
With thousands of UFO sightings in North America over the past year, Christian Stepien, Chief Technology Officer of the National UFO Reporting Center, does not think there is a specific hotspot that is the most prolific. He tells me, "In its 50 years of collecting UFO reports, NUFORC has seen several waves, where UFO sightings seem to increase in a certain location over a certain period. The latest, of course, is the mysterious drone flap occurring around New Jersey and other parts of the country. However, there doesn't seem to be a single location that UFOs frequent consistently over the years. Instead, they are seen literally everywhere, with a greater probability of sighting one occurring in areas that have a wide, clear view of the sky."
The National UFO Reporting Center, a nonprofit, nongovernmental organization where people can file reports of unusual phenomena, lists the U.S. destinations that recorded the most UFO-reported sightings in 2024 with California leading the pack.
NUFORC also lists civilian reports around the world. For the past year, the United Kingdom tops the list of most UFO sightings in Europe (120), followed by Brazil (59), Ontario, Canada (49), Australia (31), and India (31). However, Mexico lists a dramatic increase, with 33 reported sightings already taking place in 2025.
New U.S. Government Research blames many UFO sightings on Starlink Satellites and Birds
While much of its UFO research is still highly classified, the U.S. Department of Defense released its Annual Report on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena in 2024. “Many reported cases included Unidentified lights and round/spherical/orb-shaped objects made up the bulk of cases in which reports provided distinct visual characteristics. Objects include unique descriptions such as “green fireball,” “a jellyfish with [multicolored] flashing lights,” and a “silver rocket approximately six feet long.” They concluded that most reported cases were resolved to prosaic objects, including balloons, birds, UAS, satellites, and aircraft. They also added they discovered no evidence of extraterrestrial beings, activity, or technology.”
The report also adds, “Many reported cases are related to the Starlink satellite constellation. AARO is investigating if other unresolved cases may be attributed to the expansion of Starlink and other mega-constellations in low earth orbit. Starlink gives the appearance of one or more luminous white dots (1 to 4) of varying intensity with very brief flashes. The apparitions follow one another, and the movements vary in speed and direction, greatly confusing the witnesses. This phenomenon is due to a brief illumination by the Sun of the Starlink satellites when they are stationed and operational.”
In many other cases, birds are commonly misidentified as UAP/UFOs the report said, “due to sensor artifacts resulting from compression and pixilation that often render the object as an amorphous blob or orb. Electro-optical/infrared sensor glare can also cause distorted pixilation of the object’s true shape. Moreover, full-motion video (FMV) analysis, consistent with other confirmed examples of birds in flight, commonly displays birds as “flickering” objects. This phenomenon captured by FMV is indicative of flapping wings.”
In March 2024, the government released an unclassified Historical Record Report Volume I to explain “historical documents relating to KONA BLUE, a Prospective and not approved Special Access Program that was brought to AARO’s attention by interviewees who claimed that it was a sensitive Department of Homeland Security compartment to cover up the retrieval and exploitation of “non-human biologics.”



Belief in alien visits to Earth is spiralling out of control – here’s why that’s so dangerous
The idea that aliens may have visited the Earth is becoming increasingly popular. Around a fifth of UK citizens believe Earth has been visited by extraterrestrials, and an estimated 7% believe that they have seen a UFO.
The figures are even higher in the US – and rising. The number of people who believe UFO sightings offer likely proof of alien life increased from 20% in 1996 to 34% in 2022. Some 24% of Americans say they’ve seen a UFO.
This belief is slightly paradoxical as we have zero evidence that aliens even exist. What’s more, given the vast distances between star systems, it seems odd we’d only learn about them from a visit. Evidence for aliens is more likely to come from signals from faraway planets.
In a paper accepted for publication in the Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, I argue that the belief in alien visitors is no longer a quirk, but a widespread societal problem.
The belief is now rising to the extent that politicians, at least in the US, feel they have to respond. The disclosure of information about claimed Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAPs rather than UFOs) from the Pentagon has got a lot of bi-partisan attention in the country.
Much of it plays upon familiar anti-elite tropes that both parties have been ready to use, such as the idea that the military and a secretive cabal of private commercial interests are keeping the deep truth about alien visitation hidden. That truth is believed to involve sightings, abductions and reverse-engineered alien technology.
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Belief in a cover-up is even higher than belief in alien visitation. In 2019, a Gallop poll found that a staggering 68% of Americans believed that “the US government knows more about UFOs than it is telling”.
This political trend has been decades in the making. Jimmy Carter promised document disclosure during his presidential campaign in 1976, several years after his own reported UFO sighting. Like so many other sightings, the simplest explanation is that he saw Venus. (That happens a lot.)
Hillary Clinton also suggested she wanted to “open [Pentagon] files as much as I can” during her presidential campaign against Donald Trump. As seen in the video below, Trump suggested he’d need to “think about” whether it was possible to declassify the so-called Roswell documentation (relating to the notorious claimed crash of a UFO and the recovery of alien bodies).
Former president Bill Clinton claimed to have sent his chief of staff, John Podesta, down to Area 51, a highly classified US Air Force facility, just in case any of the rumours about alien technology at the site were true. It is worth nothing that Podesta is a long-time enthusiast for all things to do with UFOs.
The most prominent current advocate of document disclosure is the Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer. His stripped back 2023 UAP disclosure bill for revealing some UAP records was co-sponsored by three Republican senators.
Pentagon disclosure finally began during the early stages of Joe Biden’s term of office, but so far there has been nothing to see. Nothing looks like an encounter. Nothing looks close.
Still, the background noise does not go away.
Problems for society
All this is ultimately encouraging conspiracy theories, which could undermine trust in democratic institutions. There have been humorous calls to storm Area 51. And after the storming of the Capitol in 2021, this now looks like an increasingly dangerous possibility.
Too much background noise about UFOs and UAPs can also get in the way of legitimate science communication about the possibility of finding microbial extraterrestrial life. Astrobiology, the science dealing with such matters, has a far less effective publicity machine than UFOlogy.
History, a YouTube channel part owned by Disney, regularly delivers shows about “ancient aliens”. The show is now in its 20th season and the channel has 13.8 million subscribers. The Nasa astrobiology channel has a hard won 20,000 subscribers. Actual science finds itself badly outnumbered by entertainment repackaged as factual.
Alien visitation narratives have also repeatedly tried to hijack and overwrite the history and mythology of indigenous people.
The first steps in this direction go back to Alexander Kazantsev’s science fiction tale Explosion: The Story of a Hypothesis (1946). It presents the 1908 Tunguska meteorite impact event as a Nagasaki-like explosion of an alien spacecraft engine. In Kazantsev’s tale, a single giant black female survivor has been left stranded, equipped with special healing powers. This lead to her adoption as a shaman by the indigenous Evenki people.
Nasa and the space science community do support efforts such as the Native Skywatchers initiative set up by the indigenous Ojibwe and Lakota communities to ensure the survival of storytelling about the stars. There is a real and extensive network of indigenous scholarship about these matters.
But UFOlogists promise a far higher profile for indigenous history in return for the mashing together of genuine indigenous stories about life arriving from the skies with fictional tales about UFOs, repackaged as suppressed history.
The modern alien visitation narrative has not, after all, emerged out of indigenous communities. Quite the opposite. It emerged in part as a way for conspiracy-minded thinkers in a Europe torn apart by racism to “explain” how complex urban civilisations in places like South America could have existed prior to European settlement.
Squeezed through a new age filter of 1960s counterculture, the narrative was flipped to value indigenous people as having once possessed advanced technology. Once upon a time, according to this view, every indigenous civilisation was Wakanda, a fictional country appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
If all of this stayed in its own box, as entertaining fiction, then matters would be fine. But it doesn’t, and they aren’t. Visitation narratives tend to overwrite indigenous storytelling about sky and ground.
This is a problem for everyone, not just indigenous peoples struggling to continue authentic traditions. It threatens our grasp of the past. When it comes to insight into our remote ancestors, the remnants of prehistoric storytelling are few and precious, such as within indigenous storytelling about the stars.
Take the tales of the Pleiades, which date back in standard forms to at least 50,000 years ago.
This may be why these tales in particular are heavily targeted by alien visitation enthusiasts, some of whom even claim to be “Pleiadeans”. No surprises, Pleiadeans do not look like the Lakota or Ojibwe, but are strikingly blond, blue-eyed and Nordic.
It is increasingly clear that belief in alien visitation is no longer just a fun speculation, but something that has real and damaging consequences.
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Aliens among us? top spots around the world for a close encounter with a UFO
In July 1947 a powerful thunderstorm blew over Roswell, New Mexico – and with it came whispers of a mysterious object. Was it a weather balloon, like US military officials claimed? Was it a flying saucer from outer space, as many locals claimed?
What really crash landed from the inky desert skies that weekend has inspired countless conspiracy theories, journalistic investigations and pop culture hits from Forbidden Planet to Men in Black, from The Day the Earth Stood Still to The X-Files. It's turned UFO hunting into a cottage industry that attracts thousands to Roswell each year for events like the UFO Festival, and to on-theme attractions like the International UFO Museum & Research Center.
All that attention has garnered various responses from the US government in recent years, ranging from denials of extraterrestrial activity to recent declassifications of videos released to the public, along with fresh reports investigating the true nature of... well, whatever it is that's going on up there in the atmosphere.No matter the results of the latest UFO investigations, the debate is sure to rage for years to come. After all, a lot of people feel strongly that the truth is out there. If you, too, just want to believe, you can see for yourself where extraterrestrials may have touched down on earth at these destinations around the world.
Roswell, New Mexico
Roswell, near the site of the alleged 1947 crash of an alien spaceship, is proud to be considered the "UFO capital of the world." The UFO Festival (this year from July 1 - 3, 2022), embraces everything associated with the extraterrestrial, with a costume contest (for both pets and humans) and a light parade. Enthusiasts and skeptics are welcome to come along and explore the unexplained. The schedule of speakers covers everything from abductions to ongoing secret government programs, from first-hand alien experiences to discussions of ancient aliens on the moon.
For something a little more earthlike, you can join the Alien Chase, a 5km or 10km race through Roswell's parks.
Extraterrestrial Highway, Nevada
Nevada State Route 375 has been officially named Extraterrestrial Highway due to the number of reported sightings of strange lights in the night sky. The road runs primarily through the uninhabited desert, adjacent to Area 51 and Nellis Air Force Base. Follow the tourist board's alien-themed road trip for the best chance to see something paranormal. The town of Rachel near the midpoint of the highway trades off the mysterious sightings, with UFO-hunters stopping at the Little A’Le’Inn hotel to chat all things alien with the staff there.
There’s so little light pollution in the desert here that if there’s anything unexplained flying around up there, chances are, you’ll be able to see it clearly.
Discover the voices of Nevada’s Ghost Towns and Sagebrush Saloons
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Hoia Baciu Forest, Romania
Hoia Baciu in Romania claims to be the world's most haunted forest – but does that necessarily mean aliens are involved? The forest's connection with UFO-sightings goes back to the late 1960s when a biologist took photos of some unexplained lights over the forest. Soon after, a military technician snapped some shots of flying orbs, and similar reports of flying objects over Hoia Baciu persisted through the 1970s. From "strange feelings" to missing children, mysterious voices and paranormal events, the forest has built a reputation as a very spooky place indeed.
Nazca Lines, Peru
Mystery shrouds the Nazca Lines in Peru. It's thought they were made by a pre-Inca civilization around 450 to 600 CE, who removed earth and rocks from the Nazca plain to create vast etchings of a spider, a hummingbird and a monkey, among others. The lines can’t be easily seen at ground level, which makes them even more mysterious. Were they designed to attract aliens? Are they a giant message to life forms beyond earth? If you hang around here, will you get to see a UFO?
Wycliffe Well, Australia
A quirky small town in the remote, rural Northwestern Territory near Alice Springs, Wycliff Well has a whimsical claim to fame as the self-professed UFO capital of Australia. The claims of extraterrestrial sightings have been pouring in since the 1940s, and neither the flat, dark-sky horizon, the presence of the Pine Gap US satellite surveillance station or the free-flowing roadhouse suds can quite explain them. Maybe it's all some clever roadside marketing by local entrepreneur Lew Farkas, who doubled down on the destination's eerie reputation by giving his hotel and restaurant the Rosewell treatment, with murals of aliens and other references to the area's supernatural aura. Or maybe this really is an intergalactic rest stop for flying saucers road tripping across solar systems.
Khao Kala, Thailand
There have been reports of mysterious objects flying through the sky over Thailand since the late 1300s, but most recently it's a hill called Khao Kala near Nakhon Sawan that's become known as the Area 51 of Asia. In 2011, the Wall Street Journal reported an uptick in sightings – so many, in fact, that a statue of Buddha on Khao Kala had become the gathering point for dozens of believers certain they'd found a portal to another world. Those who flocked to Khao Kala told CNN and other news outlets that they had been contacted by beings from Pluto, as well as a mysterious planet somewhere in the Milky Way known as Loku.
Your mileage may vary when it comes to alien encounters – some think the increased UFO activity is more likely the result of more Thai families logging onto the Internet and watching TV shows about extraterrestrials in recent years. But don't worry about the trek from Bangkok being a waste of time – Nakhon Sawan has earned a reputation as a destination for foodies, too.


Varginha, Brazil
Nestled in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, you'll find all sorts of unusual critters who call the Serra do Espinhaço biosphere reserve home. There are maned wolves and woolly spider monkeys and... aliens? Back in 1996, UFO believers around the world perked up when local residents claimed they found a dead extraterrestrial in a field outside their town.
Like many destinations that have become UFO hotspots, there's an army base near Varginha, and rumors spun wild that the Brazilian military covered up the crash which killed the aliens initially spotted by three women walking home that winter weekend. But the city itself has taken a very open approach to its new-found claim to fame, embracing terrestrial tourists curious about the possibility of intergalactic visitors and constructing the Nave Espacial de Varginha, a huge flying saucer-shaped water tower in 2001.
Three years later, Varginha was even the meeting place for a national UFO research conference, ostensibly to look into not only what happened nearly a decade prior, but a whole host of other incidents reported from throughout the region around Varginha long before the supposed crash coverup. Will you see some discos voadores yourself? That's up to the extraterrestres themselves.
Emilcin, Poland
About 25 miles outside Lublin, the village of Emilcin was the site of an unusual occurrence in May of 1978. Jan Wolski, a local man in his 70s, was allegedly driving a cart when he encountered a pair of extraterrestrial beings who took him to their space ship, invited him aboard and performed a harmless examination of his body. Wolski's tale of his "alien abduction" captivated the imaginations of everyone from fellow UFOlogists to documentary filmmakers to psychologists and even comic book artists.
Other residents claimed sightings of their own, not of the little green men themselves, but of curious craft flying through the sky. Was it all a Cold War-era fantasy to liven up life behind the Iron Curtain, or was Wolski telling the truth? One thing's for sure – you can see a monument to Wolski's experience in Emilcin, which was erected in 2005 and reads "The truth will still amaze us."
Stonehenge, Great Britain
Stonehenge is one of Britain's great archaeological mysteries. Archaeologists have dated the site to around 2500 BCE, when somehow ancient engineers moved huge sarsen stones weighing up to 30 tons and smaller blue stones of around 2 to 5 tons into a circular formation aligned with the stars.
These smaller bluestones are believed to be from southwest Wales, over 150 miles away, while the sarsen stones were likely quarried nearer by at West Woods in Wiltshire – in both cases, it would have taken great effort to move the materials all the way to England’s Salisbury Plain. While it's generally accepted that Stonehenge is a temple designed to follow the movements of the sun, it's a persistent conspiracy theory that the sophisticated building techniques are clear signs of alien involvement.
Stonehenge: get to know England's most mysterious monument
Bermuda Triangle, Atlantic Ocean
The Bermuda Triangle is one place given over to UFO conspiracy theories. This large expanse of water extends roughly from the tip of Florida out northeast to Bermuda and down to Puerto Rico. It's also the site of several unexplained ship and airplane disappearances over the decades, a phenomenon that's caused many an imagination to run wild.
Scientists and researchers believe these vanishings are the result of human error or caused by issues with instruments or even are the fault of severe storms. Experts have insisted that there’s nothing unusual about the frequency of reports for a high-traffic area of this size. That hasn't dampened the convictions of paranormal believers who are certain something else is happening here – whether that’s UFOs, time portals in the sky or whatever was happening on Lost.
