The "Alien Dog" as described by Mrs. N. L. Collins near Niagara Falls, New York, January 1958.
THINK ABOUTIT’S ALIEN TYPE SUMMARY – Alien Dog / Delta Aliens
Correction Notice: This entry has been checked against its two source accounts. Several fields previously left blank now read “Undocumented” rather than being skipped. Confident-sounding claims not actually stated by either witness — a specific weight, a “scientific scouting” motive, a “likely telepathic” communication method — have been reframed as speculation or removed. The two witness accounts, decades and continents apart, are now presented as separate, non-corroborating claims.
Two witnesses, thirty-six years and roughly 4,500 miles apart, independently described something that moved on four legs, had a tail, and behaved with unsettling intelligence. Neither one used the word “alien.” Both walked away certain they’d seen something that wasn’t an animal.
Name: Delta Aliens / Alien Dog
AKA: Alien Dog
Location – Home System: Undocumented. Neither witness account names an origin system; “Delta” or “Animalian star cluster” labels circulating elsewhere are unsourced fringe-database terminology, not claims made by either witness.
Distance from Earth: Undocumented
Attitude: Non-aggressive in both accounts. Mrs. Collins described no threatening behavior; Evgeney Kupin’s account also describes no aggression, though he reports lasting psychological effects afterward (see Witnesses Reports).
Motives: Undocumented. Neither witness reports being told or shown a purpose. Any “scouting” or “sampling” framing is inference, not testimony, and shouldn’t be presented as a documented motive.
Physical Appearance: Per Mrs. Collins (1958): an animal-like body with four legs and a tail, plus two “front feelers” beneath the head that functioned like arms. Per Evgeney Kupin (2014, separate account): dirty white or greyish fur, black eyes, an appearance he described as “like dead” but strikingly intelligent in behavior.
- Average Height: Not stated by either witness. Estimates of 3–4 feet circulate but are inference, not testimony.
- Average Weight: Undocumented; not stated by either witness
- Body Temperature: Undocumented
- Pulse/Respiration: Undocumented
- Blood Pressure: Undocumented
- Life Expectancy: Undocumented
- Hair: Dirty white or greyish fur, per Kupin’s account specifically; not described by Collins
- Skin: Not visible in either account due to fur coverage
- Eyes: Large, dark or black, described as unusually expressive, per Kupin’s account specifically; not described by Collins
- Sex: Undocumented
Other Physical Information: None documented beyond the descriptions above
Special Traits and Abilities: Kupin’s account describes the being seeming to understand him visually and respond in kind, without conventional speech; he separately reports experiencing psychological aftereffects (see Witnesses Reports). This is one witness’s reported impression, not a confirmed ability.
Communication Type: Undocumented as a confirmed method. Kupin’s impression, described above, is the only relevant account, and should be read as an impression rather than established telepathy.
Origin: Undocumented
Life Form Type: Categorized here as Mammal based on the described fur and four-legged body plan; not an explicit classification from either witness. We use Animal Type.
Subspecies: Undocumented
Most Common Species: Undocumented
Level of Species: Undocumented. Speculation about an “extradimensional” nature, based on the disappearing rod and craft in the Collins account, is inference and should be labeled as such rather than stated as fact.
Habits: Undocumented beyond the specific behavior described in each witness account
Transportation Type: In the Collins account, associated with a circular craft that departed the scene after a tall illuminated rod retracted into the ground. No craft is described in Kupin’s account.
Witnesses Reports: Mrs. N. L. Collins reported that, while driving near Niagara Falls, New York, in a snowstorm in January 1958, her car’s electrical system failed near what she first mistook for wreckage — a tall, illuminated rod that appeared to be sinking into the ground. She described two four-legged, tailed shapes with forward “feeler” limbs moving near the rod before it and a saucer-shaped craft departed and her car’s electrics returned to normal. She found a melted, foot-wide patch in the snow at the site. Her account was published in the Syracuse Post-Standard on February 12, 1966. Separately, Evgeney Kupin, in a March 25, 2014 comment on this page, described encountering a similar four-legged, white-furred, black-eyed being in Temirtau, Kazakhstan, which he said seemed unusually intelligent and communicated through visual understanding rather than sound. He reported subsequent psychological effects, including distress and hallucinations, following the encounters. These are two independent, non-corroborating accounts separated by 36 years and roughly 4,500 miles; their similarity is notable but should not be read as mutual confirmation.
Special Features/Characteristics: A melted, foot-wide patch of warm ground in freezing conditions, documented at the Collins site
Summary/Description: A rare, non-humanoid entity type documented in two separate, unconnected accounts: a 1958 Niagara Falls-area sighting published in 1966, and a 2014 reader-submitted account from Kazakhstan. Both describe a four-legged, tailed, animal-like being with unusual apparent intelligence.
Source: Mrs. N. L. Collins, as published in the Syracuse (NY) Post-Standard, Feb. 12, 1966; Evgeney Kupin, reader comment on this page, March 25, 2014
Related Cases: None currently on file
DETAILED REPORT
This entry rests on two separate witness accounts rather than a single case, and the previous version of this page blended them into one confident species profile without flagging that. Mrs. Collins’ 1958 account is a period newspaper report with a named witness, a specific date, and physical trace evidence (the melted patch in the snow) — a stronger evidentiary position than many entries on this site. Evgeney Kupin’s account arrives by an entirely different route: a dated reader comment on this very page, describing a broadly similar creature nearly four decades later on a different continent, with no indication he was aware of the Collins case.
That similarity is genuinely interesting and worth preserving. But several details previously presented as settled fact — an estimated height, a specific weight, a “scientific scouting” motive, “likely telepathic” communication — were not stated by either witness. They were inference dressed as documentation, and they’ve been corrected to reflect what was actually reported versus what was guessed.
RESEARCHER’S NOTES
Two Witnesses, One Page — The Alien Dog Across Continents and Decades
- Source Chain Assessment: The Collins account is a named, dated, published newspaper report — stronger sourcing than most entries here. The Kupin account is an unverified reader comment with a real timestamp and coordinates but no independent corroboration.
- Blended vs. Separate Accounts: Presenting these as one settled “species” risks implying corroboration that doesn’t exist. They’re better read as two independent claims that happen to resemble each other.
- Inference Correction: Height, weight, motive, and communication method were previously stated with a confidence neither witness account supports. Each has been either marked undocumented or explicitly labeled as inference.
- Evidentiary Weight: The melted snow patch in the Collins account is the closest thing to physical evidence in either case — notable, but unanalyzed and unverified by any named investigator or lab.
WRAP-UP PARAGRAPH
Two witnesses, separated by most of a lifetime and half the globe, described something that walked on four legs, had a tail, and seemed to think. Neither account explains the other, and neither should be stretched to sound more certain than it is. Taken on its own terms, that’s still a strange and rare entry in the record.
QUOTE FROM THE POST
Mrs. Collins recalled two shapes near the rod that “seemed to be like animals with four legs and a tail.” (Mrs. N. L. Collins, Syracuse Post-Standard, Feb. 12, 1966)
REMOVED CLAIMS (Archived for Reference)
These details appeared in an earlier version of this page as stated fact but are not supported by either witness account. Archived here rather than deleted.
- Height of 3–4 feet and weight of 60–90 lbs: neither figure is stated by either witness; both are unsourced estimates
- Motive stated as “Scientific Scouting & Resource Sampling” — inference, not testimony from either witness
- Communication stated flatly as “Likely Telepathic” — reframed as Kupin’s personal impression rather than a confirmed method
- Origin tied to “Delta” or “Animalian star clusters in fringe databases” — unsourced terminology not used by either witness
- “Level of Species: Unknown/Extradimensional” stated as established — reframed as inference based on the Collins account’s disappearing rod and craft
Comment: Evgeney Kupin says:
Hi, I have met the strange dog in the town where I live, Kazakhstan,Temirtau(latitude: 50.05328124952725, longitude: 72.97198534011842). It looked like dead, with dirty white fur and black eyes but was very intelligent. It understood everything from eyesight and gave its thoughts by reaction. But after those meetings I had hard psychosis and soft hallucinations, just like black sports falling from the ceiling.



