It looks like Bigfoot is back again -- this time in the Virginia Intercostal Waterways.

A new YouTube video that claims to have captured the mysterious creature on camera has gone viral. On June 28, Randy O'neal uploaded a video titled "Bigfoot Caught on Camera By Virginia Man," which has received over 870,000 views.

The video displays two cell phone photos of a hairy, brown creature in Virginia off the shore of the Intercostal Waterways. It also includes a scrolling marquee where O'neal's recounts two encounters with what he believes is Sasquatch.

He says he thinks that he ran into a Bigfoot 25 years ago during a camping trip in the woods with his father and a family friend. According to him, red eyes gazing appeared at their campsite at nighttime on a Virginia Creekside. He then shot the creature with his gun.

"When I shot, whatever I shot let out the most blood curdling scream you could ever imagine," O'neal states in the video.

The creature then jumped into the water, which O'neal says "sounded like a Volkswagon had been dropped into the water."

When the three campers searched for the creature the next day, they noticed a large stomped-out path leading from the campsite to the water.

"The path that the creature cleared through the woods as it headed for the water was cleared as if a skid steer had gone through the woods," O'neal states.

Twenty-five years later, O'neal, his father and the same family friend claim to have spotted the creature near the same area while they were fishing on the Virginia Intercoastal Waterway.

Although O'neal says that his "memories and experiences have made me a believer," more than likely, what he thinks he saw is not a Bigfoot.

In a new scientific study, which was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, researchers analyzed DNA from 37 samples of Bigfoot hair donated by museums and enthusiasts from around the world. In each case, they found that the hair sample belonged to a known animal species like horses, wolves, dogs, cows and raccoons. In one instance, the DNA analysis revealed that a clump of hair found in Texas actually belonged to a human.

Two hairs from India and Bhutan also matched an unknown species that could be a distant relative of the polar bear or a hybrid of local species and a brown bear. "If these bears are widely distributed in the Himalayas, they may well contribute to the biological foundation of the yeti legend," the authors said in the study, reports Time.

Watch the video below.