More humans have walked on the moon than have been to the deepest parts of planet Earth and although the oceans cover 70% of Earth’s surface, we only know around 1% of the seafloor. Many a mystery surrounds the deep blue and this is the remarkable story of a cryptozoological enigma which washed up on Scotland's northern shores in the 19th century. [[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_large","fid":"34422","attributes":{"alt":"Tasmanian Carcass of 1960.","class":"media-image","height":"471","style":"width: 610px; height: 471px;","typeof":"foaf:Image","width":"610"}}]] Tasmanian Carcass of 1960. A globster is an unidentifiable organic mass found washed up on the shoreline of any body of water and they are most frequently studied and written about in the pseudo-scientific field of cryptozoology. A globster is different from a beached carcass in that untrained observers find them
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