SYDNEY, Australia — A crocodile likely killed an Australian fisherman after he tumbled down a riverbank into a creek, police said Tuesday.
According to police, they found human remains in the gut of a 4.9-meter (16-foot) reptile caught nearby.
The 40-year-old man was fishing on a riverbank in tropical north Queensland when he “fell into the water and failed to resurface,” the police said in a statement, adding that they were told the man had “been taken by a crocodile.”
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The fisherman had been casting his line at a secluded spot known among locals as “crocodile bend,” Australian media reported.
Rangers eventually trapped and killed a large crocodile close to where the fisherman had plunged into the water.
Police said they believed they had found the man’s remains inside the beast, and were now working on a formal identification.
READ: Remains of missing Australian man found in crocodiles
In July, a 12-year-old girl was killed by a croc as she was swimming near a remote settlement in Australia’s Northern Territory.
Deadly crocodile attacks are rare but not unheard of in Australia’s northern tropics.
Earlier this year, a saltwater croc was shot, cooked, and eaten after menacing a Northern Territory community.