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Stargazer | Cast Iron Cookware Made in USA Stargazer skillets are smooth to the touch, naturally non-stick and easy to clean Our proprietary micro-textured surface finish holds onto your seasoning, not your food We’ve replaced traditional pour spouts with a drip-free flared rim that allows for clean pouring from any angle
Stargazer (fish) - Wikipedia In addition to the top-mounted eyes, a stargazer also has a large, upward-facing mouth in a large head Their usual habit is to bury themselves in sand, and leap upwards to ambush prey (benthic fish and invertebrates) that pass overhead
Stargazer Facts: Nature’s Electric, Venomous Ambush Predator Armed with venomous spines and the ability to generate electric shocks, the stargazer is the underwater equivalent of a horror movie villain Silent, sneaky, and always watching It’s weird It’s deadly And it’s one of the most bizarre predators in the ocean
Stargazer Fish: The Unusual Marine Creature - Ocean Info Stargazers are small, perciform fish or ray-finned fish that are the largest order of vertebrates The group includes over 10,000 species in the world’s oceans They have eyes on the top of the head (hence the common name) and a large, unusual upward-facing mouth that gives them a strange appearance
Stargazer Fish Facts - Uranoscopus scaber - A-Z Animals The Stargazer Fish, also inaccurately known as the Monkfish, has Northern and Southern varieties in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans This unusual fish features eyes positioned on top of its head and awaits prey on the ocean bottom These fish are venomous and may also deliver minor electric shocks
Stargazer | Marine, Nocturnal, Bottom-Dweller | Britannica stargazer, fish of two related families, Uranoscopidae (electric stargazers) and Dactyloscopidae (sand stargazers), both of the order Perciformes Stargazers habitually bury themselves in the bottom They have tapered bodies and big, heavy, flat heads
Electric organs, venomous spines and eyes that migrate – meet . . . Stargazers are a group of around 50 different fish species, each one as odd as the next These strange-looking creatures hide in the sand waiting for unwitting prey to swim above them before they launch an ambush and gobble them up