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hammerhead
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hammerhead

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The hammerhead shark's name derives from the flattened projections at the side of its head. The eyes are on the outer edges of the projections. The advantages of this head design are not known; it may be that the shark's vision is improved by the wide separation of the eyes, or the head may provide extra lift by acting as an aerofoil.

Any of several species of shark found in tropical seas, characterized by having eyes at the ends of flattened hammerlike extensions of the skull. Hammerheads can grow to 4 m/13 ft in length. (Genus Sphyrna, family Sphyrnidae.)



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The small surface area of the hammer head crushes and thins the material so it can't do a good job conforming to the sealing surfaces.
A wallboard hatchet, shingling hatchet, hand drilling hammer and a series of five ball peen hammers that have ShockBloka vibration-absorbing core in the hammer head are now available from Vaughan & Bushnell Manufacturing, Hebron.
The most usual versions are the clamping head and the hammer head (figure 4).
 
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