The Australian Space Agency has confirmed mysterious objects found on a north Queensland beach are likely from a space launch vessel.

Australian Space Agency working to confirm origin of objects as space archaeologist says they may be connected to a rocket launch

The Australian Space Agency confirmed on it was investigating six pieces of suspected space debris found washed up on Queensland beaches

The Australian Space Agency has confirmed mysterious objects found on a north Queensland beach are likely from a space launch vessel.

Organisation says objects consistent with ‘debris from a foreign rocket body that recently re-entered the atmosphere’

Crews in protective suits were seen placing objects into hazmat barrels under police guard

Six mysterious metal balls that washed up on an Australian beach this weekend are from a space launch vehicle, experts have confirmed.

Following the discovery, authorities temporarily closed part of the beach and established a 50-metre exclusion zone as a precaution. | World News

Mysterious metal spheres found on a beach in Queensland, Australia, were likely pressure vessels from a space launch -- also known as "space balls."

The Australian Space Agency says the objects "appear to be pressure vessels from a space launch vehicle" that recently launched.

In Australia, authorities warn after several so-called space balls appeared on a beach in Queensland. Anyone who finds one must call emergency services at once and must not touch…

La agencia espacial del país oceánico identificó los objetos y, así, calmó las especulaciones.De dónde provienen y por qué las autoridades piden no acercarse a ellos.

Australia's space agency has traced six mysterious metallic spheres that forced the closure of a Queensland beach to a foreign rocket, identifying them as pressure vessels from a…

dimartedì 7 luglio 20261' di letturaSarebbero dei serbatoi a pressioni provenienti da un veicolo di lancio spaziale, le sfere non identificate rinvenute a Forrest Beach, nella…

The space balls could have been part of a rocket that recently reentered through the atmosphere.