On January 1, 1970, a nurse at the Cowicha District Hospital in Duncan, Vancouver Island, Canada, went to check on a patient and opened the curtains in his room. She saw a large, disc-shaped UFO with a glass-like dome.
The UFO's interior is 15m in diameter, illuminated from the bottom of the machine.
The nurse saw two men dressed in dark clothes standing in front of a large board inside.
Artist Patrick Bélanger designed a coin for the Royal Canadian Mint depicting the 1970 Duncan Incident. (Photo: Google)
One of the two slowly turned to face her. The other bent down and grabbed a joystick, the UFO began to tilt, rotate counterclockwise, and then disappeared. Two other witnesses in the hospital room also saw the light of this UFO.
The Royal Canadian Mint produced a collectible coin depicting the 1970 Duncan incident. The rectangular $20 coin is made of 99.99% pure silver. It retails for $139.95.
The coin was designed by Gabriola Island artist Patrick Bélanger. Bélanger was really impressed by the UFO encounter story. He said: “The dreary hospital room contrasts with the bright lights of the UFO outside the window, giving the collectible coin a mysterious feel.”
Patrick Bélanger with two coins he designed for the Royal Canadian Mint. The latest coin design depicts the Duncan Incident (left), the other, released in 2021, depicts the Montréal Incident. (Photo: Patrick Bélanger)
Bélanger designed another coin in 2021 that simulates the Montreal Incident, in which a mysterious object hovered above the Bonaventure Hotel on November 7, 1990.
HUYNH DUNG (Source: Timescolonist)
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