The purpose of the rear end of a roofing hammer

hand-toolstools

I am referring to this kind of hammer, also known as a roofing hammer.

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I understand that the flat end is intended to act as a normal hammer, and the sharp end is intended to pierce holes through roofing slate, to aid in fastening (perhaps by nails)

However, what is the purpose of the non-sharp protrusion from the rear (non-hammer) end? In other words, why is the roofing hammer's rear end asymmetric?

-edit- I found another roofing hammer, which clearly has the two rear protrusions offset from one another, so it is unlikely to be for the purpose of being a nail claw. Anyone has experience with one of those, then?

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Best Answer

Your picture does not show it particularly well, but I believe that you have a claw (for pulling nails) formed by the "stub" and a protrusion from one side of the "spike" on the illustrated hammer.

Here's a half-decent picture from a slate supply place.

Slate hammer picture from JosephJenkins.com