DGAC
Chile · SEFAA
◉ 33.5680° S · 70.6864° W · Aeródromo El Bosque, Santiago · 31 May 2010

El Bosque

On 31 May 2010, during a Fuerza Aérea de Chile (FACH) aerobatics demonstration at Aeródromo El Bosque, Santiago, multiple amateur video cameras independently recorded a small flat-disc object passing rapidly through the airshow airspace. The display was a public event with thousands of spectators; the object went unnoticed by attendees in real time but appeared on at least five separate civilian video recordings when reviewed afterward. The Comité de Estudios de Fenómenos Aéreos Anómalos (CEFAA) — Chile's civilian aviation UAP committee, later renamed SEFAA — opened a formal investigation that took 24 months. The committee's final disposition, published in the SEFAA monthly dispatch, classified the case as "sin explicación natural conocida" (without known natural explanation). El Bosque is one of the most-cited multi-camera SEFAA cases and a flagship example of the civilian-aviation-led methodology that distinguishes the Chilean approach.

Event: FACH aerobatics demonstration · Halcones display
Witnesses: Hundreds · multiple amateur recordings
Investigator: CEFAA → SEFAA (DGAC Santiago)
Status: Sin explicación · catalogued in monthly dispatch
Read time: 3 min · 755 words

The multi-camera corroboration

Five amateur recordings were collected by CEFAA investigators over the eight weeks following the event. CEFAA technical coordinator Alberto Vergara led the analysis with support from Dr. Luis Barrera (Universidad Metropolitana de Ciencias de la Educación, atmospheric physics) and pilots from the FACH. The five videos were taken from spectator positions ~150 m apart around the FACH airstrip. Frame-by-frame triangulation produced these findings: (1) The object was a real airspace contact, not a film artifact. (2) Apparent size: ~5 m across. (3) Apparent speed: ~4000 km/h (Mach ~3.3 at sea level), through airspace where the FACH Halcones aerobatic display team had jets operating at ~400 km/h. (4) No transponder return. (5) The object made one sharp directional change inconsistent with any aircraft in the FACH inventory.

Verbatim — SEFAA conclusion, monthly dispatch April 2014

"Tras 24 meses de análisis cuadro por cuadro y triangulación, el comité concluye que el objeto registrado durante la demostración de la Fuerza Aérea de Chile en El Bosque el 31 de mayo de 2010 corresponde a un objeto real, de origen no identificado, cuyas características de velocidad y maniobra no son compatibles con ningún aeronave conocido en operación en el espacio aéreo nacional ni con causas naturales conocidas."

In English: "After 24 months of frame-by-frame analysis and triangulation, the committee concludes that the object recorded during the FACH demonstration at El Bosque on 31 May 2010 corresponds to a real object of unidentified origin whose velocity and manoeuvre characteristics are not compatible with any aircraft known to operate in national airspace nor with known natural causes."

Why El Bosque defines the Chilean methodology

Three properties make El Bosque the flagship SEFAA case. (1) All five witnesses are independent civilians with multi-camera coverage, not a single source. (2) The investigation was led by a civilian aviation authority (DGAC) rather than the air force, avoiding the witness-suppression dynamic familiar in U.S./UK military programmes. (3) CEFAA published the final analysis openly, including the frame-by-frame triangulation methodology — a level of methodological transparency unique among South American UAP programmes. The case directly influenced the 2017 joint statement with Argentina's CEFAe and Brazil's FAB on cross-border ATC coordination for unidentified transponder returns.

The voice on the tape

We applied the same triangulation methodology that civil aviation uses for any unidentified airspace contact. The object exists. Its speed and manoeuvres are not compatible with any aircraft we know. We have no further explanation to offer. — Alberto Vergara, CEFAA Technical Coordinator, public press briefing, Santiago, 11 April 2014

Timeline

Linked evidence in this archive

Why this case still matters

El Bosque is the flagship SEFAA case and the textbook example of Chile's distinctive UAP methodology — civilian-aviation-led, multi-camera triangulation, open publication of analysis. It demonstrates that a small national civil-aviation authority can produce a multi-witness UAP investigation with methodological transparency comparable to GEIPAN. The case directly influenced the 2017 trinational coordination agreement and is cited in AARO's 2024 Historical Record as the Latin-American reference for multi-camera UAP verification.

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