Probably a bullshark. They're more aggressive, and powerful. Also, hammerheads are designed to eat small, round prey, not huge sharks.
bull shark buddy
bull shark , great white shark, and the hammerhead
Great White Shark, Tiger Shark, Hammerhead Shark, Sand Shark, Bull Shark
Tiger shark, great white shark,hammerhead shark,bull shark,cookie cutter shark,
A vampire becuz i dont think a shark culd rip his head off. And a vampire culd suck the blood out of a shark pretty fast.
A bull shark is similar to a bull in the way that it is very aggressive and is one of the most dangerous shark species. What makes this shark so dangerous is that it can tolerate fresh water and have been found as far north as rivers in New Jersey.
There are a number of sharks, such as the Shortfin Mako shark, Longfin Mako, Oceanic Whitetip, Great White, Bull Shark, Blue shark, and Whale shark. There are many more sharks that populate the Atlantic, and most of them are migratory.
it takes a great hammerhead 9 years, tiger and bull shark 15 years, spiney dogfish, 20 years!
A Great White shark would beat a bull shark in a fight. Now each shark has it's advantages a Great White is big and is an excellent killer. A bull shark has 40x the testosterone of a human meaning they are really aggressive. But the shear fact that of the great white's size makes it more likely to win in a fight.
I would probably say: 1.great white 2.bull shark 3.tiger shark 4.requim shark 5.sand tiger shark 6.blacktip shark 7.narrowtooth shark 8.hammerhead shark 9.spinner shark 10.blue shark
the polar bear cuz the shark cant fight on lad. OR the shark cuz the bear cant fight in water SO The world may never know.
It depends entirely on the species of shark. For instance, the Great White shark is Carcharodon carcharias, the bull shark is Carcharhinus leucas, the scalloped hammerhead shark is Sphyrna lewini, while the scalloped bonnethead (another species of hammerhead) is Sphyrna corona. There are over 470 species of sharks in the world. Regroup, rethink your question, and reask it.
well, it all depends on the weight of that particular shark, as it can be very difficult to catch and weight a great hammerhead shark, marine biologists have limited information as to the wieght that these creatures can reach. As for the bullshark, they are much more common and marine biologists have a greater knowledge of their size and weight, as they are often mistaken for a great white, i would say that the bullshark generally weights more, but as the great hammerhead is more rare, there could be individuals that weight more.