FRANCE-TAXIDERMY-SCIENCES-ANIMALS-BIOLOGY-ENVIRONMENT-MUSEUM-EXH
This picture taken on March 12, 2019 shows suckers on the tentacles of a giant squid during its restoration process at the Museum d'Histoire Naturelle's (French National Museum of Natural History) taxidermy workshop in Paris on March 12, 2019. - The exhibition "Ocean, an unusual dive" will be held from April 3, 2019 to January 5, 2020 at the Grande Galerie de l'Evolution (Great Gallery of Evolution) of the French National Museum of Natural History in Paris. Photo credit should read CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAULT/AFP via Getty Images

The internet has now grown wild and undoubtably curious as to what Vicki Hansen, as well as many other onlookers, saw in an Australian beach.

Vicki Hansen discovered the clam-like life forms dried ashore on Sydney's Greenhills Seaside and likened it to an episode from the popular Netflix show "Stranger Things."

Wiggling Creature Found in the Beach

A unique ocean critter that resembles the monstrosity from the popular Netflix series "Stranger Things" was discovered on a beach in North Wales, according to the recent report from news media website, The Mirror.

Community members claimed they've never once encountered anything like these.

In an interview, Vicki Hansen responded by telling Yahoo News Australia that she saw the interesting critters while walking her dog on Saturday morning.

An intriguing pile of writhing marine mammals washed up on a Sydney shoreline, causing onlookers bewildered as well as everyone else contemplating a malevolent notion over their fate.

In her exclusive interview, Hansen explained as to how she saw the creatures.

In her statement, she recalled that during the wee morning of Saturday at Greenhills Sea shore in the Sutherland Shire, wherein she was strolling her dog, she noticed the clam-like animals, equating the experience to a scenario from the famous show.

According to Hansen, she observed several dangling limply, however when she leaned down to inspect them, she noticed that a few of them were undulating, somewhat resembling a slow waltz.

Moreover, she believed that the floppy ones had ended up dead from being withdrawn from the vast ocean, while the active ones were presumably dancing their final dying gesture.

For Hansen, what she saw was purely odd, weird, as well as magnificent all at once.

Hansen's photographs and videos clearly demonstrated thousands of the squirming shells tied to a broad wood by obvious "tendrils."

Pile of Rare Sea Creatures in an Australian Beach

Gooseneck barnacles, a relatively uncommon but also costly gourmet from which it can sell for up to 300 pounds per kilogram, were recognized as the marine monster.

Gooseneck barnacles are usually encountered on the Costa da Morte in Spain.

The animals are considered to be lepas, which reside mostly in parts of the ocean that are remote from civilization.

Numerous additional bystanders noticed the critters and shared images of them on the internet in an attempt to figure out what they were.

Yet another woman who observed them while walking down the sea shore summed up the encounter and the creature as "ugly, beautiful, and bizarre" simultaneously.

She prayed the water would sweep them away.

However, Hansen stated that she went by them again the next day and that the animals appeared to have perished.

She described them as lifeless and motionless.

Hansen wasn't the sole individual who came and spotted the animals; many more residents subsequently posted photographs on Facebook in an attempt to discover them, as per Geo Tv update.

"Incredible, I was going across Scotts Head beachfront on the Mid North Coast yesterday and witnessed precisely the same stuff!" Kind of filthy, somewhat magnificent, and a big lot strange! ", one woman remarked.