235 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
235 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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SUBJECT: ODD EVENTS IN AUSTRALIA FILE: UFO2163
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(c) Copyright Paul Cropper 1990
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Fortean Events in Australia, No. 2, May 1990.
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Compiled by Paul Cropper, 10 Shirley St Epping N.S.W. 2121 Australia.
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Greetings, fellow Forteans! I hope the 90's have started out well for
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you all.
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This listing covers Fortean events from December 89 to May 90,
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and should particularly appeal to those Forteans interested in falls;
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since last December, there have been at least 3 seperate incidents
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here in Australia, involving metallic lead, fish and (wait for it!),
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jellyfish. As so much material is coming across my desk at the moment,
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it is likely that future updates will appear more frequently than
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every six months. I'm also hoping to provide a more detailed account
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of Australian incidents and investigations in Mark Chorvinsky's
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excellent STRANGE MAGAZINE (P.O. Box 2246, Rockville, MD 20847,
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U.S.A.).
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I've decided to omit U.F.O. reports from FEIA as I feel the situation
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is currently better covered by other individuals and organisations
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currently providing material to Paranet. However, if enough people are
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interested (and let me know if you are) I'll expand this summary. My
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clipping service does send me a few U.F.O. clips, plus mystery animal
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and other general Fortean stuff.
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Within FEIA, I've tried to focus on reports from sources that have
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some credibility; Australia (like the U.S.) has a number of
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sensational tabloids that feature quite obviously fabricated stories
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of ghosts, alien abductions, U.F.O.'s etc. Most of these reports lack
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even basic details like the time, place and real names.
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In early June I hope to travel to the Grampians Mountain Range of
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central Victoria and spend some time investigating reports of "black
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panthers" and cougar-like cats in the area. In the next FEIA I'll
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detail the results of my trip. As I mentioned in my first summary, I
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would be happy to hear from anyone interested in obtaining more info
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on particular cases or discussing Fortean phenomena in general. Please
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post me a e-mail message or drop me a line at the address above.
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FALLS 90:1/ December,1989/Ringwood, Victoria/"Ringwood Mail", Ringwood
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Victoria, 13 December 1989, personal communication.
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Fred Porter, a resident of Ringwood, was walking to a local meeting
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one morning in early December last year, when a "mystery missile"
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landed only a short distance from where he was standing. The incident
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occurred around 10 a.m., while Mr Porter was preparing to cross the
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usually busy Maroondah Highway. Mr Porter had been looking up the road
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prior to walking across, when he watched as a small object hit the
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ground about 10 feet ahead of him in the roadside grass. The object
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had impacted at some speed and embedded itself into the ground. Mr
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Porter tried to pick it up, but it was too hot to touch. He waited for
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around 2 minutes, and finally picked the object up and examined it.
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The was small (6 cm by 2.5 cm by 1 cm deep ) metallic, rectangular in
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shape and extremely heavy for its size. Having some time to spare, Mr
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Porter then went directly to the offices of the Ringwood Mail, a local
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newspaper, told them his story and then continued on to his meeting.
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At that meeting was the local government member for Ringwood, Tony
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Lamb, who arranged for the object to be analysed by the Commonwealth
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Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (C.S.I.R.O.). Mr
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Porter later received a copy of the results of their analysis through
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Tony Lamb, and part of the letter (from the Australian Minister for
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Science, Barry Jones) reads as follows:
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" The material was found to be a lump of metallic lead, almost
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certainly man-made and could be derived from Ringwood's early mining
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history. It is significantly oxidised on the exterior surface and is
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probably quite old. I am advised that metallic lead does not conform
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to any known kind meteorite and is extremely rare as a natural
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material. It is also unlikely that the material was from an artificial
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satellite. Mr Porter's description of how he witnessed a meteorite
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fall may be correct but the sample provided is not of that origin."
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So, whatever nearly killed Fred Porter was neither a meteorite or a
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piece of "space-junk". I talked to Fred over the phone early in May,
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and he proved to be an intelligent, lucid witness. He assured me the
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object could only have come from above; there were no planes, cars or
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people anywhere nearby. Fred even sent me the object, and its sitting
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on a shelf above my computer as I type this report. A fascinating
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case.
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FALLS 90:2/ 2nd January 1990/Jerilderie, N.S.W./"Sydney Morning
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Herald", Sydney N.S.W., 4th January 1990.
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The following item, reprinted in its entirety, appeared in the paper's
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'Column 8' section:
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"Hot yesterday, but down south in Jerilderie on Tuesday it was raining
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fish. A local property owner heard thudding on her roof, and was
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surprised to find nearly 30 small fish scattered across the roof and
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the front lawn. She says the National Parks and Wildlife Service in
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Griffith told her the phenomenon was caused by windy conditions and
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"willy-willies". The N.P.W.S office in Sydney says that strong winds
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can pick up tadpoles and small fish and carry them some distance."
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That old "strong winds" explanation again! Well readers, I couldn't
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let that one rest, so the following column appeared in 'Column 8' on
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the following Tuesday:
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"The raining fish in Jerilderie interested Paul Cropper of Epping, who
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has studied the phenomenon. He says the explanation by the National
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Parks and Wildlife Service that the cause is gusty winds or willy-
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willies may be simplistic. "If the fish are scooped up out of the
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water, why is there no debris?". However, Bob Beale, our science
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correspondent, says there are dozens of recorded cases of fish, frogs
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and other creatures being picked up and dropped by freak winds- and at
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least one instance where sheep were sucked up in a cyclone and
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deposited some distance away in trees."
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Well, I guess Science has spoken!
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TASMANIAN TIGER 90:3/January 1990/Golconda, Tasmania/ "The
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Advertiser", Adelaide, 24 February 1990.
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Some doubts remain over the reported discovery in early January of
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supposed Tiger droppings in an old mining tunnel near Golconda, a
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small town in Tasmania's north-east. The large, dry animal "skats"
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were found by Golconda resident George Richardson, who also happens to
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lead the anti-logging Golconda Community Group. The Group were
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anxiously awaiting analysis of the droppings, as confirmation of the
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find would probably end any plans to log the nearby State forest.
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Launceston's Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery Zoology curator Bob
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Green confirmed that the droppings were too large to have been left by
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a Tasmanian Devil, the only other likely source.
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FALLS 90:4/February 1990/Darling Point, Sydney, N.S.W./"Sydney Morning
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Herald", Sydney N.S.W., 13 February 1990.
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I came across the following intriguing article in the Herald's 'Column
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8' section:
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"Two readers say they have an explanation for the raining jellyfish
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(Column 8, Thursday). In their gardens in Darling Point and Lindfield
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they have found large deposits of a jelly-like substance, which they
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say comes from the ripe seed pods of the Illawarra Flame Tree.
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However, Yvonne Bone of Darling Point is sticking to her story: she
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says she doesn't have a flame tree and swears they were jellyfish."
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A fall of jellyfish? This could be a Fortean first! A quick call to
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Mrs Bone obtained further details. The fall had apparently occurred
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during one of the heavy rainstorms that hit Sydney in early February.
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Mrs Bone, whose house in Darling Point is some distance from the sea,
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found the jellyfish on her driveway early the next morning. There were
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4 jellyfish in her yard, two the size of dinner plates and the rest
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quite small. Her next door neighbour also found several jellyfish on
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her lawn. Interestingly, Mrs Bone told me her neighbour said she had
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seen frogs falling during a storm at Coffs Harbour in northern N.S.W.
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Could she have been the "focus" of the fall? I intend to find out more
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about this case, so stay tuned.
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RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA 90:5/February 1990/Sydney, N.S.W./"West
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Australian", Perth W.A., 28 February 1990.
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Thousands of people flocked to meetings held by visiting Father
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Emilien Tardiff after claims that a number of miracle healings had
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occurred. According to witnesses, people were cured of deafness,
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arthritis, alcoholism and even cancer. Father Tardiff, a French
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Canadian priest from the Sacred Heart Ministry, claimed that he had
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initially been opposed to faith healing but was converted after his
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own cure from tuberculosis. In one well publicised incident during his
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visit, a girl who had been "crippled" in a school bus accident got out
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of her wheelchair and walked.
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RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA 90:6/1981/Woombye, Qld/"Australasian Post"
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Magazine, 3 February 1990.
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This interesting old case surfaced in February this year, and concerns
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a photograph of a rainbow taken in 1981 by Mrs Ivy Wilson of Woombye,
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Queensland. Some claim the photograph shows the unexplained image of a
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woman and a child, similar to paintings of the Virgin Mary. Mrs Wilson
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had merely aimed her simple Box Brownie camera at a beautiful rainbow
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on her property, 114 k.m. north of Brisbane. It was several months
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before the film inside was processed. "My grand-daughter was the first
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one to notice anything unusual", she said. "As far as I was concerned,
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this was a picture of a rainbow. But my grand-daughter said: 'Wait a
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minute, there's something else on it'. Then she and her mother got out
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a magnifying glass and were able to see this outline that looked like
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a mother and child...... When I came home I found the image was on the
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negative...". Whilst Mrs Wilson was not a Catholic, the image had
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aroused the interest of the Catholic order The Knights of the Southern
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Cross, who sent 4000 copies of the photograph to members of the order
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and their friends.
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TASMANIAN TIGER 90:7/ February 1990/ Tasmania/"The Age", Melbourne, 21
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February 1990.
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For three years, photographer Dave Watts has operated remote camera
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stations hidden deep in the Tasmanian bush, hoping for a photograph of
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the elusive Tasmanian Tiger. Mr Watts, of Kettering, has set up his
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battery- powered, continuous-reel photographic system in places where
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he believes the thylacine's habitat has been undisturbed. It took Mr
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Watts around 18 months to get his first picture of the relatively
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common brushtail possum. "If , for example, there are only 50
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thylacines, that puts the difficulty of seeing it into perspective.",
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he said. Next week, Mr Watts intends to go back into the bush to
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retrieve one of his films. "For a wildlife photographer, there
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couldn't be anything to top it on the face of this earth," he said.
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"Except the Loch Ness Monster, and I don't believe that exists."
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APPARITIONS 90:8/March 1990/Battery Point, Hobart, Tasmania/"Sunday
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Tasmanian", Hobart, 4 March 1990.
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When the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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(C.S.I.R.O.) leaves the current premises at Stowell House, they'll be
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leaving behind more than just a stately Sandstone Georgian home. Since
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World War 2, a ghost known as the "Grey Lady" has also shared the
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building. Retired C.S.I.R.O. scientist Dr Don Martin, 79, says the
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ghost has appeared to him twice, in 1957 and 1958. On both occasions
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he was working at night in his second floor office, directly under the
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old building's tower. The figure of a woman, wearing a grey crinoline
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hooped dress, appeared at the open doorway. "She seemed quite benign,
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but I couldn't make out her face" Dr Martin said. "It was blurred,
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kind of misty. Then she just went away." Legend has it that the "Grey
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Lady" is the ghost of a young woman who, in the 1850's, was thrown
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down the tower stairs by her stepfather after he found out she was
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pregnant to a former convict.
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TASMANIAN TIGER 90:9/March 1990/ Bawley Point, N.S.W./ Personal
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Communication.
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Two recent mainland Tiger sightings were reported to Canberra
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cryptozoologist Tony Healy by an lecturer at Canberra's Australian
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National University. The informant told Tony that a friend of his had
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sighted the Tiger between Bawley Point and Termeil in early March this
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year. The animal had been clearly visible in his car's headlights. The
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professor also mentioned to Tony that another friend, an ex-wildlife
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ranger, had seen a Tasmanian Tiger from a helicopter whilst flying
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over the rugged Kimberley Ranges in northern Western Australia several
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years ago.
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MYSTERY BIG CATS 90:10/May, 1990/ Ararat, Victoria/Personal
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communication.
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A farmer from Moyston, Central Victoria, contacted me in early May to
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report a recent sighting of a large, black cat resembling a panther
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near the town of Ararat, located north-west of Melbourne. The
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witnesses had been hearing unusual "screeches" on their property for
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some time, and one evening in May whilst spotlighting they disturbed a
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large, black cat-like animal that moved away towards a creek extremely
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quickly. They estimated the animal was around 1 metre high and
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including the tail, about 2.5 metres long.
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**********************************************
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* THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo *
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**********************************************
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