On The Beach Of Liverpool, The Surf Brought Something - Alternative View

On The Beach Of Liverpool, The Surf Brought Something - Alternative View
On The Beach Of Liverpool, The Surf Brought Something - Alternative View

Video: On The Beach Of Liverpool, The Surf Brought Something - Alternative View

Video: On The Beach Of Liverpool, The Surf Brought Something - Alternative View
Video: The Merceytides- 1962 Liverpool surf band 2024, March
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dailymail.co.uk: An alien creature was thrown onto the Merseyside seaside in Liverpool on Wednesday by the surf that not even scientists can identify and is currently simply called "Ainsdale's Anomaly."

The creature is 15 feet long. It does not have a clearly identifiable head. The creature is covered in something like fur and appears to have another creature attached to it, possibly through the umbilical cord, as if it were about to give birth.

“It looks like a whale that has swallowed a cow that ate a dolphin before,” one of the beach visitors said about her impressions.

Another 32-year-old woman, who asked to remain anonymous, said that the remains smelled so bad that she even felt unwell:

“I didn't get too close because there were a lot of flies and it smelled. But I still made the mistake of going downwind, bypassing it all. And when the wind blew, I almost vomited,”she admitted.

The person who asked to remain anonymous shared photos of the seaside with Ainsdale's Facebook community pages:

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When photographs of this creature were posted on the Internet, people began to speculate about what it might be. Various ideas were expressed, ranging from a cow to thawing a mammoth. However, these assumptions are unlikely to be true.

An official from the environmental department who examined the creature found it difficult to say what it was:

“From a distance it, at first, looked like a whale that was heavily decomposed. There is something that resembles a spine and it clearly shows through the bones. But the body is very deformed and is like three welded organic conglomerates. Perhaps it's not even a body, but just a part of something much larger,”said the biologist.

Now it is the turn of marine biologists to speak, so we are trying to contact the Department of Marine Biology at the University of Liverpool and get comments at least there.