Hammer head Shark
That is probably a 'mallet'.An actual hammer may have a metal handle and/or head, but a mallet always has a non-metallic head which is, historically, wooden.
No. There's the hammerhead shark who's head is shaped like a hammer.
A Mallet
Their shape is just like most sharks but their head is shaped like a hammer and they are 11 feet (3.3 meters).
sharks have always been relatively closely shaped to the way they are shaped now. they are very streamlined which allows them to move fast and be apex predators.
The hammarhead shark,like all sharks,has to keep moving in order to stay alive. The hammarhead also moves quite a lot because of the way it's head is shaped. In order to see in front of them they must swing their head and they do this constantly.
Crescent shape
Yes hammer head sharks are born, and they come out alive not like a larva.
It's head is hammer shaped. It does not use its head like a hammer.
I'd say an animal that has a head and neck shaped like a horse would be a donkey.
Their head is shaped like a hammer, hence the name.Their heads are shaped like hammers, an eye on each end. They can't look forward, but can swing their hammer shaped head from side to side to search for food.It looks slightly thinner than an ordinary shark but the head is shaped like a "T" with the eyes at the ends of the cross member. Sort of.Like a regular shark-they just have eye stalks. See below-
Only the head of a seahorse is shaped like a horse, and it is coincidential.