Die at sea, and you sleep with the fishes. Wash ashore far enough north, however, and polar bears might eat you. Not that you'll care by then.

Few places are farther north than Svalbard, an archipelago in the Arctic Ocean that's officially part of Norway -- even if it lies halfway between the mainland and the North Pole. A photographer who goes by his Flickr handle, "buen viaje," came across the submerged vertebrae of a fin whale while on a trip from Iceland to Svalbard in 2010.

(Story continues below)

"Fin whale carcass the bears have been feeding on for the past year (sic). The next BBC documentary you see with polar bears will without question have footage from this spot!" the photographer wrote on Flickr.

While it's not certain whether the BBC took footage of the remains, buen viaje's photo definitely has some fans on Reddit, where it received more than 9,500 "upvotes" after it was posted Thursday.

The polar bears seem to have missed this particular photo op, but they're pretty fond of fin whale meat, as you can see in this video:

Om nom nom. Sadly, their dinner is endangered. Food scarcity is reportedly linked to gruesome incidences of cannibalism among polar bears.

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