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SightingModern Era

Vancouver–Burnaby Black Oval

2002–2003

Vancouver / Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

UFO sighting over Vancouver, British Columbia — dozens of independent witnesses reported a matte-black oval craft moving silently over the Vancouver–Burnaby corridor during the 2002–2003 wave

UFO sighting over Vancouver, British Columbia — dozens of independent witnesses reported a matte-black oval craft moving silently over the Vancouver–Burnaby corridor during the 2002–2003 wave — Vancouver Is Awesome

Credibility Assessment

Low
Multiple WitnessesPhoto Evidence

Event Description

Observed Shape
Disc

Craft morphology

Non-Human Intelligence (NHI)
Reported Entities

No NHI encounter documented for this event.

Between 2002 and 2003, a sustained wave of sightings of a matte-black oval or disc-shaped object occurred over the Vancouver–Burnaby metropolitan corridor in British Columbia. The wave involved multiple independent witnesses reporting sightings on different dates, sometimes within days of each other, across a defined geographic corridor spanning Vancouver's east side, the Burnaby Mountain area, and the SkyTrain corridor toward Coquitlam. The object was consistently described across reports in terms that matched with unusual precision: matte or flat black in coloration with no reflective surfaces, oval or slightly elongated disc-shaped, completely silent, and observed moving at low altitude — sometimes appearing to hover completely stationary. The craft would then accelerate abruptly, reaching high speed almost instantaneously before passing out of visual range. Several witnesses independently noted the absence of any sound despite the object's apparent size and low altitude. Estimated dimensions ranged from approximately 20 to 40 feet in the major axis. Multiple witnesses attempted to photograph the object. Several of the resulting images were submitted to UFO*BC, the principal British Columbia civilian UAP investigation organization, and to Geoff Dittman's Canadian UFO Survey — the most comprehensive database of Canadian reports compiled during that era. The photographs showed a dark oval shape against sky background, consistent across multiple separate events. Photo analysts who examined the images noted no obvious signs of hoaxing but also acknowledged the limitations of civilian-grade camera equipment in definitively characterizing the object. The geographic concentration of the wave in the Vancouver–Burnaby corridor is notable. This area sits under and adjacent to the flight paths serving Vancouver International Airport, within visual range of CFB Esquimalt's operational area, and directly along the coastal radar coverage zone. Any unidentified object making repeated appearances in this airspace over a 12-month period would have been visible to both military and civilian radar infrastructure — though no official acknowledgment of radar contact was made. UFO*BC's investigation included follow-up interviews with primary witnesses, site surveys, and cross-referencing of reports to identify consistent elements. The organization noted that the clustering of independent reports sharing a common description — particularly the matte-black coloration and instant acceleration — was among the stronger indicators in their archive that the wave reflected a single recurring object rather than independent misidentifications.

5 Observables Detected

Instantaneous Acceleration
Hypersonic Velocity
Low Observability
Trans-Medium Travel
Anti-Gravity Lift

Suspicious Activity

Intelligence Agency
Cover-up Actions
Men in Black
Disinformation
Witness Suppression

Sources

mediaUFO*BC — Vancouver/Burnaby wave case files
mediaCanadian UFO Survey — Dittman, G. (2002–2003 annual reports)