The Sea View of Cliffs, Guy Rose
Medium: oil,canvas
Beauty and the Beast, Hansel and Grethel, Rumpelstiltskin, Cinderella by A. L. Bowley (English?)
Artist: Omar Rayyan
This extraordinary deep-sea resident is Avocettina bowersii, also known as a snipe eel. The snipe eels in the family Nemichthyidae have thin, tweezer-like jaws that bend outwards. It was long debated how these fishes eat, but we now know that their tiny, backward-facing teeth, almost like velcro, allow them to capture small crustaceans and bring the prey into their mouths with a series of quick chomps.
Snipe eels can be found at depths between 92 and 641 meters (300 and 2,100 feet) and measure about one to two meters (three to five feet) in length.
Isle of the Dead is the best-known painting of Swiss Symbolist artist Arnold Böcklin (1827–1901)
The Isle of the Dead, 1883, Arnold Bocklin
Medium: oil,panel
Bretagne
Artist: Thomas Benjamin Kennington.
The Höllengebirge at Ischl, 1834, Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller
https://www.wikiart.org/en/ferdinand-georg-waldm-ller/the-h-llengebirge-at-ischl-1834
Today's crab is: turning the other cheek