Species (Crotalus cerastes) of small, nocturnal rattlesnake, found in sandy deserts of Mexico and the southwestern U.S. It is 18-30 in. (45-75 cm) long. It has hornlike scales above its eyes and is pale tan, pinkish, or gray, with an inconspicuous spotted pattern on the back and sides. It moves by looping itself obliquely across the sand, leaving a characteristic J-shaped trail. Its venomous bite is usually not fatal to humans
This term also is used to describe the sidewheeler fan It was also used to describe ceiling fans where the motor sides rotated thus turning the blade
This is a element found on some Arrow Dynamic coasters It features a half corkscrew, followed by half a loop In the end it makes a 90 degree turn
An inversion element on a roller coaster that makes a 90-degree turn while the train is inverted
small pale-colored desert rattlesnake of southwestern United States; body moves in an s-shaped curve air-to-air missile with infrared homing device
{i} species of rattlesnake that moves across sand by making sideways looping motions with its body (native to northern Mexico and the southwestern United States); hard punch made from the side
One half of Arrow Dynamic's version of a Boomerang element, which makes a 90-degree turn