On September 7, 1957, multiple witnesses on Ubatuba beach in São Paulo state, Brazil, observed a disc-shaped object flying at extremely high speed and low altitude over the ocean before exploding in a shower of glowing fragments. Several witnesses entered the water to collect pieces from the beach. The fragments were passed to Brazilian journalist Ibrahim Sued of O Globo newspaper, who forwarded samples to Dr. Olavo Fontes — a physician and civilian UAP researcher with access to laboratory contacts — for scientific analysis.
Fontes submitted samples to the Mineral Production Laboratory (LPM) of Brazil's National Department of Mineral Production. Initial analysis reported the material to be pure magnesium — significantly purer than any magnesium commercially achievable in 1957. Normal industrial magnesium contains measurable impurities including aluminum, copper, silicon, and manganese as byproducts of the Pidgeon or electrolytic reduction processes available at the time. The LPM results indicated purity levels inconsistent with terrestrial manufacturing capability, and the isotope ratios were described by some analysts as anomalous relative to terrestrially sourced magnesium.
Subsequent analysis by the US Air Force Foreign Technology Division, the Mellon Institute, and later the University of Colorado under the Condon Report produced sharply inconsistent results. Some analyses confirmed the extraordinary purity claims; others found isotope ratios within normal terrestrial ranges. The Condon Report listed the case as unexplained but expressed skepticism about the chain of custody for the samples, noting that the connection between the original fragments and later analyzed material could not be conclusively established. Sample degradation and multiple handlings complicated any definitive conclusions.
Stanford University physicist Peter Sturrock later reexamined remaining samples and published peer-reviewed findings in the Journal of Scientific Exploration describing properties that he regarded as scientifically significant. The Ubatuba material remains among the most scientifically scrutinized alleged UAP physical evidence samples in history — notable precisely because the inconsistency of its analyses has never been resolved in either direction, keeping it in a state of genuine scientific ambiguity.