Pilot WitnessRadar CorroboratedVideo EvidenceMultiple WitnessesExpert Witness
Event Description
Observed Shape
Orb
Craft morphology
Non-Human Intelligence (NHI)
Reported Entities
No NHI encounter documented for this event.
In the early hours of December 31, 1978, a television news crew from Melbourne's Channel 0 — cameraman David Crockett and reporter Quentin Fogarty — aboard an Argosy freight aircraft operating off the Kaikoura coast of New Zealand's South Island captured what remains one of the most extensively analyzed UAP film records in history.
The encounter had actually begun ten days earlier: on the night of December 21, 1978, pilots of an Air New Zealand Argosy freight flight on the same route had observed and reported multiple luminous objects behaving anomalously over the same stretch of Kaikoura coastline. Wellington Air Traffic Control had also tracked unidentified contacts on radar during that earlier flight. The Channel 0 crew was dispatched specifically to attempt to document the phenomenon, and on the return flight in the very early hours of December 31, the objects reappeared.
Over the course of the flight, the crew filmed multiple bright objects that approached and flanked the aircraft, performed rapid accelerating maneuvers, and in several instances appeared to track the Argosy across significant distances. The objects were simultaneously tracked on both the aircraft's onboard radar and by Wellington Air Traffic Control on the ground — a dual instrumental confirmation independent of the film itself. This multi-source corroboration structure — film, airborne radar, and ground radar all recording the same events — distinguishes the Kaikoura case from the vast majority of UAP film records.
The footage was broadcast internationally and subjected to rigorous scientific analysis. Dr. Bruce Maccabee, a physicist employed by the US Naval Surface Weapons Center, conducted a detailed optical analysis of the film and concluded that the objects were genuine physical light sources of substantial size — not lens artifacts, insects, or reflections — whose nature was scientifically unknown. Squadron Leader John Cordy of the Royal New Zealand Air Force stated formally that the objects were unidentified. Australian government analysts and Kodak film laboratory technicians also examined the original film stock and found no evidence of optical fabrication, double exposure, or laboratory manipulation.
The Kaikoura film remains one of the few UAP records to have been analyzed by a serving military officer (formally unidentified), a government-contracted film laboratory, and an independent credentialed physicist — with all three reaching consistent conclusions.