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    Technology

    “Faceless sea monster” on a beach in Yorkshire has British experts baffled

    Scientists have proposed their own options

    On the beach of North Yorkshire (UK), researcher Caroline Pindar discovered a mysterious discovery: a mysterious faceless sea animal, the size of three women. Experts do not understand who this animal could be. Scientists build different versions.

    Caroline Pindar was exploring rock pools in Heyburn Wyke, North Yorkshire, when she noticed strange remains. She talked about it like this: “This place is remote, it can only be reached on foot. There was a strong storm, and there was a lot of foam among the stones. From a distance, I wondered if the remains were foam or washed-up fishing debris – There is a lot of this kind of pollution here. But when I got closer, it turned out to be too big.”

    The scientist noted that the remains were badly decomposed, bones were sticking out of the skin, on one side the “monster” there were piles of fat: “The way it was hunched over gave the impression that the exposed bones were walrus tusks. Neither the head nor the tail were obvious. The smell was very strong.”

    Pindar estimates that the creature was 16 feet long (almost 5 meters). Searching for answers, Caroline, 61, shared her photos with a marine life specialist group online, but there was no clear consensus on what she found.

    One expert responded: “They look like tusks, so I think it's a walrus.”

    Another put forward the theory that it was a minke whale. Others suggested that it was a seal or some kind of large dolphin. Even experts from the UK's Stranded Cetacean Program were stuck trying to accurately identify the find.

    Project manager Rob DeVille said: “It's a bit more complicated than that!” It looks like the decomposed remains of a larger cetacean — I think in one of the images I can see the remains of folds on the throat. Given the size of the person in the background, I'm probably leaning towards something like a minke whale. But honestly, it's hard to say given the decomposition. Perhaps I would just call it an unidentified or undefined baleen whale?

    But for Caroline Pindar herself, these answers were unconvincing: “I saw dead porpoises here in various stages of decomposition, and I also saw/I smelled a decaying whale in the water in Orkney, but nothing like that. My overwhelming feeling was sadness that the animal had died. Then anxiety, bewilderment, how and why it died.

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