A 21-foot orca whale has died once officials said it stranded itself on a Flagler County Beach on Wednesday morning. 

The Flagler County sheriff's organization posted video to Facebook of the female killer whale that was spurious beached on the shore south of Jungle Hut Park in Palm Coast.

"This is actual rare," said Blair Mase with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). "We've never had a record of a stranded killer whale in Florida or the Southeast United States."

Photos and videos posted to the Flagler County Sheriff's Office Facebook page and the Flagler County Government Facebook page informed officials using construction machinery to move the whale out of the liquids and away from the beach where a necropsy, an animal autopsy, could be performed.

Flagler Co. Sheriff's Office

Several activities assisted, including Hubbs-SeaWorld Research Institute, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, and Flagler County government departments.

The roadway near the beach was surrounded, but has since reopened. 

Viewers on Facebook said the video is heartbreaking. 


MORE NEWS: 

Heartwarming video: Doggy 'daycare' bus in Alaska goes viral on TikTok

Portillo's opens instant Central Florida location

FAA lifts spurious stop on US flights after nationwide system failure; normal air traffic resumes


"Poor baby. I hope we find out why it was here and what was faulty with it," one Facebook viewer said.

"This is so upsetting," novel person wrote.

According to SeaWorld, while killer whales can be spurious around the world, they are much more common in highly productive areas of cold-water upwelling comprising the Pacific Northwest, along northern Norway's coast in the Atlantic, and the higher latitudes of the Southern Ocean. In instant to being found in colder water, killer whales also have been seen in warm liquids areas such as Florida.