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IncidentShag Harbour Incident (4 October 1967)

aka Shag Harbour Incident (4 October 1967)

On the night of 4 October 1967, multiple witnesses including Royal Canadian Mounted Police Cst. Ron O'Brien observed an object impact the water in Shag Harbour, Nova Scotia; the Royal Canadian Navy conducted an underwater search with diving teams over the following days. The Canadian government's official file remains in declassified form at Library and Archives Canada.

phenomenologically-open Multiple independent witnesses to a water impact, an RCMP file designated as a UFO report, and a Royal Canadian Navy dive search that recovered nothing — Canada's only officially-designated UFO crash search.
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status history (1)
2026-06-09 · unannotated → phenomenologically-open — initial annotation sweep (Epic J.F4)

On the night of 4 October 1967 at approximately 23:20, multiple witnesses in and around the small fishing village of Shag Harbour, Shelburne County, Nova Scotia — including Royal Canadian Mounted Police Cst. Ron O’Brien and three teenage local witnesses (Laurie Wickens, Norman Smith, David Kendrick) — observed a luminous object descend at a shallow angle and impact the water in the harbour, approximately 250 meters offshore. The object was reported as approximately 60 feet in length, with four bright lights, descending in a controlled manner before impact. After impact, a bright yellow foam was visible on the water at the impact site.

The RCMP responded within 30 minutes. Cst. O’Brien and other officers contacted the Rescue Coordination Center at CFB Halifax. The Royal Canadian Navy diverted HMCS Granby (a coastal patrol vessel) and HMCS Annapolis to the scene, arriving early the next morning. Royal Canadian Navy clearance divers from CFB Halifax (the Naval Underwater Diving Establishment) were deployed to search the impact site over the subsequent 3–4 days. The search recovered no debris but reported a yellowish foam on the surface for approximately 24 hours after impact.

The case is unusual for the unambiguous water-impact element (an object that descended and entered the ocean, witnessed by multiple independent observers including a sworn RCMP officer), the immediate professional response (RCMP + Royal Canadian Navy diving teams), and the existence of contemporary Canadian government documentation. The full Canadian Department of National Defence file (RG 77, Department of National Defence UFO Files, including the Shag Harbour investigation correspondence between the RCMP, the Canadian Forces Maritime Command, and the Department of Transport) was declassified by Library and Archives Canada in stages from the 1970s.

The official Canadian DND file conclusion is that the impact event was real but the object was “unidentified.” No official explanation has been offered; subsequent skeptical analysis (most prominently by Donald Ledger and Chris Styles in Dark Object, 2001) examined whether the object might have been a meteor or aircraft component, but neither candidate accounts for the witnesses’ reports of a slow, controlled descent and a structured-object appearance with multiple lights. The case is one of the few mid-20th-century water-impact UAP cases with formal national military response and surviving public documentation.

Notable & intriguing

Public-record items already documented about this subject. Folklore is labelled. Sources cited where the specificity warrants it.

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