This index documents the long history of UAP crashes occurring at remote locations across the globe.
Other UFO | UAP Crash Locations Index:
While Roswell remains the most famous case in history, it is far from the only instance of a downed non-human craft. This Other UFO | UAP Crash Locations Index serves as a global directory for retrieval operations occurring across every continent and spanning over a century of recorded history. From the pre-industrial mystery of the 1865 Montana crash to the highly coordinated military recoveries in the UK, Russia, and South America, this database tracks the physical evidence left behind by unidentified anomalous phenomena. When a UAP transitions from a sighting to a “hard landing,” the geopolitical race to secure that technology begins.
Explore our categorized list of international and historical crashes, featuring detailed witness reports and newspaper archives that pre-date modern flight. This index includes the essential 1864–2000 Crash Timeline, providing a longitudinal view of how these events have been documented by the press and military investigators alike. Whether you are researching the “Aurora, Texas” incident of 1897 or the secretive “Operation Blue Fly” deployments overseas, this archive provides the global context necessary to understand the full scope of the UAP crash retrieval reality.
Executive Summary
The Other UFO | UAP Crash Locations Index serves as the primary “Global Hub” within the Think Aboutit architecture, specifically organizing cases that fall outside the Roswell umbrella. Its objective is to demonstrate that the retrieval of off-world technology is an international concern, involving various world powers and specialized recovery teams. By grouping these incidents—such as the 1865 Buffalo Road Trail event—the index provides a vital resource for comparing the physical characteristics of craft recovered in different eras and geographical zones.
This index is optimized to support large-scale data sets, including our comprehensive Reported Crashes and Recoveries list, which catalogs events from 1864 through the turn of the millennium. By centralizing these diverse reports, we highlight the persistent nature of the phenomenon and the evolution of the “Quick Reaction” military protocols used to secure crash sites. As global transparency regarding UAP increases in 2026, this index remains a critical tool for researchers tracking the movement of exotic materials across international borders.