Campers discover mysterious circular footprints around their tent

A group of Aussie travellers were felt feeling anxious and unsettled after finding  bizarre footprints at their remote outback campsite.

Michelle Gilmore and her family noticed the markings in the red dirt when they arrived at the site in East Warakurna, near the border of Western Australia and Northern Territory border last week.

They eventually realised the perfectly circular prints belonged to a flock of camels they’d spotted enroute.

While Ms Gilmore and her partner had a caravan to sleep in, her mum and brother and sister-in-law were ‘nervous’ the camels would return and trample over their tents.

The group had seen ‘lots of the feral animals’ as they approached the campsite from Curtin Springs, where they stayed the previous night more than 300km east.

The trio set up their tents ‘backing onto a tree so they’d be safe from the camels’.

Another camper at the previous site said they had recently been ‘woken up in the middle of the night by camels stampeding right near their van’, Ms Gilmore recalled in a Facebook post

Campers feared they would be trampled on after spotting these circular footprints at their campsite, which  belonged to a flock of camels roaming the area

The family’s chilling encounter unfolded during a 70-day camping trip through the ‘centre of Australia’.

More than 300,000 feral camels are believed to roam the Australian outback.

They were first imported to Australia from India and Afghanistan during the 1840s as beasts of burden for exploration and development in arid areas.

More than 4,500 had been introduced to western and central Australia by the 20th century for use in goldfields during the Gold Rush. 

A fast-growing feral population started spreading in the early 1900s after they were casually released when motorised transport became more popular.

Michelle Gilmore and her family were left terrified by footprints around their campsite

Michelle Gilmore and her family were left terrified by footprints around their campsite 

The Western Australian government declared feral camels as pests of agriculture in 2007 as they’re grazing causes serious damage to local environmental.

They also directly compete for food with native animals, such as kangaroos and possums, and digest many plants previously not predated on. 

During dry conditions, camels are also known be aggressive toward sheep, cattle and other livestock and deprive them of water.

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk