Date:
March 10, 1993
Location: Maslin Beach, Australia
When
Eric Thomason in Maslin Beach, Australia, looked out across
the ocean, he saw - to his great surprise - how an object
rose from the waves and started flying towards him. When
the object came nearer, Eric took out his camera and started
taking photographs.
![](images/Who%27s%20Who%20in%20UFOlogy/Additional%20UFO%20Sightings/MaslinBeach1-2.jpg)
Mr. Thomason's first picture of the object coming out
of the water. The three legs could be
seen together with several portholes.
![](images/Who%27s%20Who%20in%20UFOlogy/Additional%20UFO%20Sightings/MaslinBeach2-2.jpg)
The main object has turned its bottom to the photographer
and a second object has
appeared a little farther away.
![](images/Who%27s%20Who%20in%20UFOlogy/Additional%20UFO%20Sightings/MaslinBeach3-2.jpg)
Both of the objects in a slightly different position.
![](images/Who%27s%20Who%20in%20UFOlogy/Additional%20UFO%20Sightings/MaslinBeach4-2.jpg)
The main object with the second object slightly under
a bit farther away.
![](images/Who%27s%20Who%20in%20UFOlogy/Additional%20UFO%20Sightings/MaslinBeach5-2.jpg)
Close-up of object from the first photo.
![](images/Who%27s%20Who%20in%20UFOlogy/Additional%20UFO%20Sightings/MaslinBeach6-2.jpg)
Maslin Beach. An arrow points to the place were Mr. Thomason
was standing during the
observation.
Source:
Claus Svahn, UFO Sweden
[go
to original source]
The
1993 Maslin Beach photo case
When
Eric Thomason in Maslin Beach, Australia, looked out across
the ocean, he saw - to his great surprise - how an object
rose from the waves and started flying towards him. When
the object came nearer, Eric took out his camera and started
taking photographs.
- "I could feel water dripping from the craft",
he tells UFO-Aktuellt.
By
Clas Svahn
Translation by Stefan Isaksson
The
photographs are quite sensational, and there are really
just two alternatives: either Eric Thomason's photographs
are the most astounding so far, or it's just a simple
hoax.
Eric
Thomason, 69, is a senior citizen living in Maslin Beach
in southern Australia. Not far from his house is an old
abandoned mine, Maslin Old Quarry, where he sometimes
takes his dog for a walk.
In
March 1993, Eric decided to try to document the old mine
using his son's camera, a Kodak S50 with a Fuji 100 ASA-film.
Despite having never owned a camera of his own and having
virtually no experiencing photographing, Eric set off
in order to try to capture the beautiful colors of the
open-cast mine from as many angles as possible. And a
photo contest in the magazine "Southern Times-Messenger"
about the best image of a sunrise over land also helped
him in his decision. He thought he would be able to capture
the sunrise on film from Ochre Point, a cliff 60 meters
high from where hang-gliders used to take off - but the
sun was hidden behind a dense layer of clouds.
The
Sun was Hidden
Wednesday,
March 10, didn't appear to be much better. It was a cool
morning, only 14 degrees Celsius, and a stubborn wind
came from the west. From the top of the grassy cliff,
Eric was forced to accept that there wasn't going to be
a sunrise that morning either. A persistent layer of clouds
blocked out the sun, and the time was 06:00 a.m. when
Eric instead turned to face the ocean to the west.
"It
was then that I saw a movement on the surface on the water,
and something looking like the tower on an atomic submarine
emerged," Eric tells UFO-Sweden. "When
the object rose from the water, I was able to see how
three legs were pointing out from the hull. I was also
able to see how it was spinning, and how the three legs
were pulled in."
Before
the legs were pulled in, Eric managed to take his first
photograph of the object, and he estimates the distance
to the object at the time being about 400 meters. It then
dawned on him how exposed his position was. Standing on
top of the Ochre Point with the sun right behind him made
him an easy target to spot for a possible crew.
"I
had heard of people being abducted by UFOs, so I climbed
down a slope nearby. From there I could see how the light-grey
object came flying somewhat south of me, and came to a
halt over the mine. At that very moment I spotted yet
another object, north of the first one. That's when I
snapped my second picture, but since the light from the
sunrise was straight into my view-finder I moved a little
to the left."
While
taking photographs from his hideout five meters below
the top of the cliff, the new object moved towards the
larger one, came to a halt, and then continued upwards,
into a deepening in the larger object.
"I
could see three lights on the exterior of the larger object
and how it shone around the opening. Shortly after I'd
taken the fourth and last photograph the larger object
rose straight up and disappeared over me. When that happened,
I could feel water dripping from the craft down on me."
In
a report form to the Australian UFO-group Australian Flying
Saucer Research Society, Eric estimates the size of the
object to be 40 meters, and the distance (when he first
saw it rise from the ocean) to be 2 kilometres. While
talking to him on the phone, Eric tells me how it never
got closer to him than 400 metres.
When
the incident was over, Eric returned home. However, despite
his amazing encounter he decided to remain quiet about
it, even to his wife. He first wanted to have the film
developed in order to find out if there indeed were any
photographs of it. But he was not in a hurry. Before he
handed in the film for development he made sure to use
up the entire film. And not until May, 1994, when he had
watched a UFO show on TV, did he bring forward the photographs.
"At
first he didn't tell me anything since I wasn't feeling
well at the time, and later he believed that the photographs
weren't going to show anything", Mrs. Thomason
says when UFO-Sweden talks to her. "But after
he had had the film developed, he showed them to me. I'm
certain it's a spaceship. Eric is not the lying type,
and I believe him."
Quick
Stroll
Still,
there are several details in his story that are worth
pondering. Eric Thomason set his alarm clock to 05:45
in order to catch the sunrise, which took place around
06:00. During these 15 minutes, Mr. Thomason had time
to get out of bed, put on several layers of warm clothing,
bring his camera, fetch the dog at the back of the house,
walk to Ochre Point (which according to Mrs. Thomason
takes 5 minutes), climb the 60 meters tall cliff, wait
for the failed sunrise, and then walk on to another site
close by in order to look out over the ocean. At 06:00
sharp, he took his first photograph of the object. The
bright blue sky on the first photograph suggests the images
were taken later in the day.
In
a letter, Eric describes what happened when the photographs
were returned from the photo lab: "When the film
had been developed I noticed yet another object on the
first photograph, which I hadn't seen during the incident
itself. A black dot in the distance, halfway between the
object and the edge of the photograph, which might have
been an airplane several kilometres away, or the smaller
object on its way to intercept with the larger one."
Cheap
Camera
According
to Eric, the negatives were analyzed by Kodak in Adelaide,
but he doesn't know anything about the results. The negatives
were sent in by Mark Tarrot, a "UFO-fanatic".
He knows what the results were.
The
camera Eric used was a cheap Kodak S50, purchased in a
department store for 40 USD. The S50 uses normal 35 mm
film, and has never been available on the Swedish market.
Its focus is set, and cannot be changed. There are, on
the whole, no buttons to push except the shutter release.
Cameras of this type are always set on infinitude, and
have a large depth of field. And here's where an uncertainty
becomes apparent. If you look at the first photograph,
the object, which supposedly is 400 metres away, is in
focus while the horizon is fuzzy. As a matter of fact,
both the object and the horizon should be in focus. That
aside, the images agree with Eric's story, and during
our entire conversation, he answers all my questions correct,
even when I try to trap him.
Mr.
Thomason's photographs have caused a lot of attention
worldwide, and have even ended up in an American UFO almanac.
"There
have been so many people calling, that I'm now starting
to get sick of it", Eric says while mentioning
how he is very critical to other UFO photographs. "But
I've begun looking for them in the evenings while out
walking the dog. I know there are UFOs from different
planets in the universe. But so far, I've only seen meteorites."
Finally
I ask Erik Thomason the most important question of them
all: Are the photographs really genuine? Do they really
depict the object you said emerged from the ocean?
"Yes,
absolutely, he says briefly and adds, OK?"
Source:
http://www.ufoevidence.org/cases/case1045.htm