An eel perforating through a heron’s body in mid flight - a one in a million shot captured by amateur photographer, Sam David from Delaware.
Some species of eels have a sharp, hardened snout for digging in sand, enabling them to break free from the internal organs of predators by piercing through the wall of the oesophagus or stomach.
Humans have been known to eat live eels and insert these into their colons. This photo is an eye-opening warning of the potential consequences of such practices.
It is not known whether either of the 2 creatures survived.
@MariusBra1982@JohanFourie020@engineers_feed Perhaps, but what liquid at the bottom?
I couldn't find any clear liquid with a density > 1.84
Say the key is made of steel or brass with a density ~8.
We would need a clear liquid with a density of say 9, which does not exist.