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Gigantic Mola mola washes up on Oregon beach, fascinating local residents

A seven-foot-long sunfish was recently discovered on the Oregon coast, catching the attention of local aquatic experts.

The fish, also known as a sunfish, recently washed up on the shore of Hug Point State Park in Arch Cape, Oregon. Local aquarium Seaside Aquarium posted photos of the creature to Facebook, noting that it's “causing quite a stir.”

“It's been unused for quite some time, but it's still an interesting place. [sic]”If you'd like to see it, we recommend heading to Huge Point at low tide and heading north towards the falls,” Seaside Aquarium says.

The aquarium said the dead fish was 6.9 feet long, making it an average-sized fish, although ocean sunfish can grow up to 10 feet long and weigh up to 5,000 pounds.

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A seven-foot-long sunfish recently washed up on the Oregon coast. (Tiffany Booth/Seaside Aquarium)

“They feed on large numbers of jellyfish, which appear in large numbers at this time of year,” the aquarium said.

Photos shared by the Seaside Aquarium show the fish in a gray, shriveled and decaying state, with the aquarium noting that three sunfish have washed up on Clatsop County shorelines since June.

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One of the fish, a sunfish, was discovered in June. Also known as a ocean sunfish, the 7.3-foot-long creature was the first to be described as an endemic species in the past decade and is believed to be one of the largest sunfish humans have ever seen.

A wide shot of a sunfish washed up on the beach

Seaside Aquarium said the sunfish had been dead for “a significant amount of time.” (Tiffany Booth/Seaside Aquarium)

” [sunfish] “Sunfish are native to the Oregon coast and are unlikely to wash up on shore,” the aquarium noted, “but reports have increased due to the commotion caused when one washed up (this is the first sunfish recorded in Oregon, likely due to it being recently described and designated as a new species).”

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“Everyone knows we're interested in documenting these strandings and gleaning information from them.”

Several Facebook users wrote about seeing the fish, with one commenter noting that it smelled rotten.

Huge fish washed up on the beach

Three sunfish have washed up in Clatsop County since June. (Tiffany Booth/Seaside Aquarium)

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“It's washed up on the south end of Hug Point Beach now and it stinks pretty bad,” one local resident said.

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“Saw it last week, it was pretty deteriorated then,” added another.

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