A grisly discovery of a creature that "looks like an orc" from Lord of the Rings has been made after its remains were washed up on a beach.
Andrea Jud, 39, found the mysterious eyeless corpse baring its sharp teeth on the shores of Gabr el-Bint on the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt.
The mysterious animal had two sets of jaws - one within the other - to help it hunt.
The woman who made the find says it reminded her of something out of the hit film Alien and was stunned when it caught her eye.
"I didn't touch it, just looking at it made me feel uneasy," she said. "It freaked me out. It looked like a Lord of the Rings orc."
Adding to the mystery was the creature's location - Andrea estimates it was 40ft inland, beyond the reach of the waves.
She said: "I was camping with a bunch of friends, we had hiked to the location along the coast from Dahab.
"I saw it early in the morning when I was walking back from the shore. It looked really dead - the skin was dry and dark grey and patchy. It has a distinctive head, with an open mouth showing sharp teeth.
"There was an opening further back on the head where one would suspect the ears, but it might have been the gills.
"I could not see any eyes. The body was long and curved, with the end pointing up towards the head, like a seahorse."
She continued: "I was surprised at how big it was - maybe the length of my arm - and the head was bigger than my fist.
"It was gruesome to look at, and reminded me of the reality of death.
"My initial impression was that it was a being who suffered a rather horrible death. I couldn't figure out what kind of creature it was."
Looking for answers, the Swiss development consultant shared her photos with a marine identification group on Facebook.
The answers were imaginative, to say the least.
"Baby Loch Ness monster," ventured one person. Voldemort, I think," said another, referring to the villainous Harry
Potter character.
Others suggested it was a mermaid, a "demogorgon" - the monster from the Netflix series, Stranger Things - or more simply "the stuff of nightmares".
But others thought that the jaws-within-jaws offered a clue.
Moray eels have a second set of jaws within their throat - and when a fish is caught within the main jaws - this second set launches forwards, dragging the prey back to be swallowed.
If it is a moray, the harsh Egyptian sun might have scorched it beyond easy recognition.
In any case, how the creature died - and how it ended up so far beyond the surf - remains a mystery.
Andrea said: "It was too far inwards to have been pushed there by waves, as far as I know. The locals were fishing nearby and it might have been caught by them, but it was not near the other traces of fishing like sea shells. It was just alone."
Moray eels are typically found in tropical and subtropical waters, including the Red Sea.