Weeks ago, thousands of round, sticky black balls washed up on the famed beaches of Sydney, Australia. The mysterious blobs ...
Initially believed to be made of tar, scientists at the University of New South Wales confirmed the sticky balls are in fact ...
The contents of the 'black balls' that washed up on Sydney, Australia beaches last month have been identified after weeks of ...
After thousands of mysterious dark, sticky balls washed up on shorelines in Sydney, Australia in October – leading to beach ...
An environmental agency says black balls that washed up on Sydney beaches aren't tar, but a "complex composition" of "mixed ...
In case you have been wondering, the hideous black balls that washed up on Australia’s shores last month turn out to be ...
The mystery of the black balls that washed up on some of Sydney’s most iconic beaches last month has now been solved – and it ...
When hundreds of golf ball-sized black balls mysteriously washed onto the beaches of Sydney, it caused enough alarm for the ...
A few weeks back, 'mysterious black balls' washed up on Coogee Beach in Sydney, Australia and at the time it was evident they ...
Scientists have solved the mystery of sticky black balls that began washing on beaches in Sydney, Australia last month.
Testing shows thousands of balls that washed up on Sydney’s beaches are a mix of cooking oil, soap scum, faeces and drugs.
The golf-ball-size debris that closed beaches across the Australian city wasn't tar balls as first thought. It was made up of decomposed cooking oils, hair and food waste.