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A relaxing stroll along the beach is something many of us enjoy.
But what happens if you stumble across ancient human remains?
That's what happened to Christopher Rees, from Bridgend, while walking his dog at Dunraven Bay, in the Vale of Glamorgan, last October.
The 39-year-old was with his seven-year-old son, Dylan, when he saw part of a bone sticking out of the sand.
"Dylan loves learning about history and going to the museums, so he was excited to see what it was," Christopher said.
Dylan initially thought the bones were "a dinosaur", and they carried some of what they found back to the car to take home.
But what happens if you stumble across ancient human remains?
That's what happened to Christopher Rees, from Bridgend, while walking his dog at Dunraven Bay, in the Vale of Glamorgan, last October.
The 39-year-old was with his seven-year-old son, Dylan, when he saw part of a bone sticking out of the sand.
"Dylan loves learning about history and going to the museums, so he was excited to see what it was," Christopher said.
Dylan initially thought the bones were "a dinosaur", and they carried some of what they found back to the car to take home.
Dunraven Bay: The beach where people keep finding human bones
Human remains have been discovered multiple times along one stretch of Welsh coastline.
www.bbc.com