A mysterious discovery on this popular beach has forced its closure

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A clean-up effort is under way after a popular beach became dotted with mysterious ball-shaped pieces of debris.

Sydney's Coogee Beach, in the city's east, remained closed on Wednesday after lifeguards found the suspected "tar balls" washed up on the shore the previous day.

"Council is investigating the origin and composition of the material, which has the appearance of dark spheres," Randwick City Council said in a statement on Wednesday.

Beachgoers were advised not to touch the material amid a clean-up and investigation of the matter.

The material might be "tar balls", formed when oil came into contact with debris and water, the council said.

Such events were typically the result of oil spills or seepage.

Randwick mayor Dylan Parker said he wasn't aware of recent oil spills nearby.

"If it is made of oil, it can be carcinogenic (potential to cause cancer)," he told ABC TV. "We're strongly advising people just not to touch them."

NSW Environment Minister Penny Sharpe said Coogee was the only beach affected.

A group of black 'tar balls' washed on the sand of a beach.

Mysterious, black sphere-shaped debris washed up on Coogee Beach on Tuesday. Source: AAP / Steven Markham

"It's an unusual occurrence … the other beaches are fine but we hope to get to the bottom of what is a pretty unusual situation as quickly as possible," she said.

The state's Environmental Protection Authority was working with the council to determine the cause of the wash-up.

Tar balls are small pieces of oil — often remnants of spills — but they can sometimes occur naturally from seeping crude oil. They are commonly known to wash up on the Californian coastline from seepage on the sea floor.

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