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Japanese officials investigate mysterious sphere washed up on beach

Japanese officials sealed off a beach on Tuesday morning to investigate a large, mysterious metal sphere of unknown origin.

The “suspicious” ball was reported by a local resident in Hamamatsu, a southern coastal city about 155 miles from Tokyo, who called police just before 9 a.m. saying “a large round object was washed up on the beach,” Asahi News reported.

The woman said her husband first noticed the object while taking a walk on the weekend.

According to police, the object is a sphere with a diameter of around 4 feet, and is believed to be made of iron as it has a coating of rust.

The object is a sphere with a diameter of around 4 feet and is believed to be made of iron as it has a coating of rust.
The object is a sphere with a diameter of around 4 feet and is believed to be made of iron as it has a coating of rust. Twitter/NHK

Officials restricted access within 655 feet around the object for most of the day, with bomb disposal crews seen inspecting the ball.

An X-ray later determined the object was hollow and there was no danger of explosion, with the restrictions lifted at around 4 p.m., according to Fuji News Network.

The object, which has a protrusion that would allow it to be hooked onto something, closely resembles a mooring buoy, Vice News noted.

But the strange sighting sparked a brief flurry of TV attention and frenzied social media speculation, coming in the wake of the US shooting down a Chinese spy balloon followed by multiple unidentified objects.

Bomb disposal crews are seen inspecting the ball, as officials restricted access within 655 feet around the object for the most of the day.
Bomb disposal crews are seen inspecting the ball, as officials restricted access within 655 feet around the object for the most of the day. Twitter/NHK

Japanese police say they will ask local officials responsible for coastal management to collect the ball.