According to
the report, Gary and Angela Williams, from Overton, Lancashire, were
strolling along Middleton Sands beach near Morecambe Bay when they
smelled rotting fish.
After following the stench, they spotted an bizarre-looking 'rock'
that resembled a piece of ambergris - or 'whale vomit' - which is used
in perfume -making.
The couple had previously read about the highly-prized substance in
a newspaper, so they wrapped the enormous lump in a scarf and took it
home.
Gary, 48, later put the mound on his fishing scales and found it
weighed 1.57kg - just more than half the size of a lump discovered near
Morecambe several years ago.
The previous piece of 'whale vomit' was valued at a staggering
£120,000 in 2013. Gary and Angela, a 49 year-old nurse, are now in
negotiations with potential buyers over the recently-found lump, which
is slightly smaller than a rugby ball.
Dubbed 'floating gold' due to its rareness and high value to
perfume makers, ambergris is hardened intestinal slurry from a sperm
whale. The substance takes years to form and is thought to protect the
animal from the hard and sharp objects it eats.
It can float in the ocean for years before washing ashore.Long-term
exposure to the sun and salt water transform it into a smooth, grey
lump of compact rock.
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