Yorkshire may be swiftly becoming Britain’s ‘UFO’ hotspot.
Several remarkable new photos reveal a flurry of so-called ‘unidentified flying objects’ in Headingley in Leeds, West Yorkshire.
Local resident and photographer Jesse Gallagher snapped the strange collection of unearthly bodies over several months using his iPhone.
The snaps, shared exclusively with the Daily Mail, were all taken after dark around midnight, making their ghostly light easier for the camera to detect.
And they certainly form an eerie motely crew of strange shapes and sizes, several deviating a lot from traditional depictions of a UFO.
‘When zooming in, the orbs are either white or multi-coloured and can be seen pulsating,’ Mr Gallagher told the Daily Mail.
‘One recording has the moon as a backdrop which provides some interesting perspective.
‘I have seen other videos of similar objects around the world.’

They make up an eerie motely crew of strange shapes and sizes, deviating a lot from traditional depictions of a UFO. Pictured, the spoon-shaped entity

Another entity in a deeper shade of blue seems to form a very rough sphere or orb and be emitting a faint ring of light
Mr Gallagher said his footage was captured around midnight in Headingley between August 2021 and November 2023.
Bizarrely, one of the UFOs with a ghostly slivery-blue tint resembles a spoon or a spade – with a narrow stream of light connecting a fainter circle.
Another entity in an even deeper shade of blue seems to form a very rough sphere or orb and be emitting a faint beams of light.
Meanwhile, the third snap shows a bright white ball of brilliant light, almost perfectly circular, with the moon as a tiny blob in the background.
But perhaps most intriguing photo shows a textured grey object with an unusual level of detail – a possible cone or horn, with what seems to be a hole in the middle.
Clues from its appearance suggest it could be a discarded piece of machinery or a fragment of disused spacecraft.
But, in such an instance, rules of physics surely dictate that it would hit the ground.
Philip Mantle, a British UFO researcher, said the images show some kind of ‘distant light source that is out of focus’.

The third snap shows a bright white ball of brilliant light, almost perfectly circular, with the moon a tiny blob in the background

A piece of spacecraft? Perhaps most intriguing of the four pictures is this one, showing a textured grey object with an unusual level of detail
‘The out of focus image makes the light look very different from what the naked eye would see,’ he told the Daily Mail.
‘They could well be simple lens flares as seen in the photo of the moon.’
But Mr Mantle stopped short of calling them ‘UFOs’ – a term that may or may not describe an object thought to have an extraterrestrial origin.
Only last week, another Yorkshire resident revealed photos of a bizarre saucer-shaped object just outside of Skipton.
John Tunnah took about 10 or 12 photographs from his vantage point near the hills, but the object only appeared in one of them.
The object is remarkably similar to the classic UFO saucer shape depicted in popular culture, with a distinctive round and elongated shape.
Nick Pope, a UFO expert formerly with the UK’s Ministry of Defence, offered a number of explanations for Mr Tunnah’s photo.
‘When photos show an anomaly that wasn’t seen at the time, I suspect either a glitch with the camera, or a fast-moving object like a bird or an insect, close to the lens,’ Mr Pope told the Daily Mail.

This bizarre saucer-shaped object was snapped with a Pentax Optio SVi camera by Yorkshire photographer John Tunnah

The man’s attention was drawn by a perfectly formed arch of cloud over the trees (centre) – and only later did he notice the saucer-shaped object on the left
UFOs became a major subject of interest after World War II and were thought by some researchers to be intelligent extraterrestrial life visiting Earth.
In the US, the government’s Department of Defense, commonly known as the Pentagon, now refrains from using the term UFO at all.
This is largely because it is commonly associated with wind up conspiracy theories and paranoia.
Instead, the Pentagon uses UAP – ‘unidentified aerial phenomenon’ – although in most places this has low usage and is yet to enter common parlance.
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