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THE 


NATURAL  HISTORY 


OF 


BRITISH    SHELLS, 


INCLUDING 


FIGURES  and  DESCRIPTIONS 


OF    ALL    THE 


SPECIES  HITHERTO  DISCOVERED   IN    GREAT  BRITAIN, 


SYSTEMATICALLY    ARRANGED 


IN  THE   LINNEAN  MANNER, 


WITH 


SCIENTIFIC  AND  GENERAL  OBSERVATIONS  ON  EACH, 


VOL.   IV. 


aogfe^g  jjft  igjii>a««i— 


By    E.    DONOVAN,    F.L.S. 

AUTHOR  OF  THE  NATURAL  HISTORIES  OF 
BRITISH  BIRDS,     INSECTS,    &C.   &C. 

-—»#©•; 5 O  -*^0 *©*»— 

LONDON: 

PRINTED  FOR  THE  AUTHOR, 

AND     FOR 

F.  AND  C.  RIVINGTON,  No  62,  ST.  PAUL'S  CHURCH-YARD; 

BY   BYE    AND    LAW,    ST.  JOHN'S    SQUARE,   CLERKENWELL. 

1802. 


/\a 


>■    ■ 

:c,  k, 

.cu      NEW  Y08K.       A 
4?AL  H^> 

THE 


NATURAL  HISTORY 

OF 

BRITISH  SHELLS, 

PLATE      CIX\ 

MUREX  CARINATUS. 

CARINATED   MUREX. 
GENERIC     CHARACTER. 

Spiral,    rough.     The   aperture  ending   in  a    strait,   and  somewhat 
produced  gutter  or  canaliculation. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Tail  patulous :  Shell  oblong,  of  six  spires,   with  two  smooth  spiral 
ridges;  first  spire  ventricose.     Aperture  semi-circular. 

Murex  Carinatus  :  testa  patulo-subcaudata  oblonga  :  anfractibus 
sex  laevibus  bicarinatis ;  primo  ventriccso,  apertura 
semicircular;' . 
a  2 


> 


y. 


PLATE    CIX^' 

Murex  carinatus,  angulated.  With  five  or  six  spires,  the  body  ven- 
tricose  :  the  spires  rising  into  angulated  ridges. 
The  aperture  semicircular.  Length  near  four 
inches.  From  the  Portland  Cabinet.  Pom. 
Br.  Zool.  T.  A.  p.  123.  sp.  96. 


The  shell  figured  in  the  annexed  Plate  is  unique  ;  it  formerly  be- 
longed to  the  late  Duchess  of  Portland,  by  whose  permission  Mr. 
Pennant  described  it  in  the  British  Zoology.  This  author  has  given 
two  figures  of  it,  one  in  Plate  77,  and  the  other  in  the  Frontispiece 
of  the  fourth  volume. 

The  existence  of  this  species  being  only  proved  by  a  solitary  speci- 
men, various  conjectures  have  arisen  amongst  Conchologists  respecting 
it.  Some  have  been  inclined  to  admit  it  as  an  undoubted  species,  and 
others  as  a  mere  accidental  variety  of  growth  of  the  Linnsean  Murex 
Antiquus.  How  far  we  may  be  authorized  to  abide  by  the  former 
opinion  must  rest  with  the  critical  Naturalist- 

To  argue  that  it  cannot  be  a  distinct  species,  because  only  one 
shell  of  the  kind  has  been  hitherto  found,  is  absurd  ;  since  the  ex- 
istence of  many  other  species  has  been  asserted  upon  the  evidence  of 
a  single  specimen  only,  and  its  relation  to  Murex  antiquus  is  not  so 
obvious  as  mi?ht  be  at  first  imagined.  It  certainly  approaches  it  in 
die  general  outline,  but  the  ridges  of  Murex  Antiquus  is  most  com- 
pletely raised  into  tubercules,  whereas  those  of  Carinatus  are  per- 
fectly smooth  and  even,  nor  is  there  that  strict  correspondence  in 
the  angulations  of  the  contour  in  general  that  should  induce  us  to 
consider  it  a  variety  of  Murex  Carinatus. 


PLATE    CIX. 

In  deciding  a  question  of  some  moment  to  the  English  Concho- 
logist,  it  has  been  thought  advisable  to  cive  an  additional  Plate  of 
Murex  Antiquus,  by  which  the  difference  between  the  two  shells  may- 
be more  easily  discriminated.  We  must  however  observe,  that  the 
latter  is  not  absolutely  known  as  a  British  shell  ;  it  is  a  native  of  the 
North  Seas,  and  has  been  supposed  to  inhabit  some  of  the  remote 
northern  islands  of  the  British  dominions.  The  Murex  Antiquus  of 
Pennant  is  a  very  different  shell,  and  by  no  means  allied  to  that  of 
Linnaeus,  whose  name  it  bears. 

It  is  now  uncertain  from  what  part  of  our  coast  the  Duchess  of 
Portland  received  this  shell  ;  Pennant  is  silent  in  this  respect,  but  we 
cannot  dispute  that  her  Grace  received  it  as  a  British  shell,  since  it 
was  inserted  upon  her  authority  in  the  British  Zoology. 


A 


o 


.'-'■ 


•at 


no 


:\ 


PLATE     CX, 
SOLEN   MARGINATUS. 

MARGINATED    RAZOR  SHELL* 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Bivalve,  with  equal  valves,  oblong,  open  at  both  ends.  At  the 
hinge  a  subulated  tooth  turned  back,  often  double  ;  not  inserted  in 
the  opposite  shell.     Animal  an  ascidia. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  straight,  of  equal  depth,  a  single  tooth  in  each  valve. 

Solen  Marginatus  :  testa  lineari   recta   marginata,  valvulis  un- 

dentatis. 
Solen  Vagina,  Sheath,  Penn.  Br.Zool.  p.  83.  No.  21. 


Some  Conchologists  imagine  that  Da  Costa  has  confounded  this 
species  with  his  Solen  Siliqua,  but  it  is  more  probable  that  he  had 
•never  met  with  it,  or  the  character  of  the  teeth  at  the  hinge  could 
not  have  escaped  his  notice.  In  its  general  appearance  it  is  not  un- 
like Solen  Siliqua,  but  has  one  end  marginated,  and  only  a  single 

A  4 


PLATE     CX. 

tooth  in  each  valve  ;  on  the  contrary  Solen  Siliqua  has  two  tee!:h  in 
one  valve,  and  one  in  the  other;  the  single  one  being  insetted  be- 
tween the  two  others  when  the  shell  is  shut. 

This  is  very  scarce.     Pennant  says  it  inhabits  Red  Wharf,  Anglesea, 
—This  is  not  Solen  Vagina  of  Linnaeus,  as  Pennant  describes  it. 


I 


PLATE    CXI. 

TROCHUS  TERRESTRIS. 

LAND   TOP  SHELL. 
GENERIC  CHARACTER. 

.   Animal  a  slug.     Shell  conic,   aperture  nearly  triangular. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Rather  conic,  whitish,   with   a  spiral  brown  streak  along  the  middle 

of  the  wreaths. 

Trochus  Terrestris  :    testa    subconica  albida  anfractibus   linea 

media  fusca. 
Trochus  Terrestris,  Land.     Penn.  Brit.  Zool.   No.  108.    tab.  80. 

fig.  10S. 
Trochus  Terrestris  tertius.     Da  Costa  Br.  Conch,  p.  36.  C. 


Pennant  describes  this  new  British  species  of  Land  Trochus  upon 
the  authority  of  Mr.  Hudson,  who  discovered  it  upon  the  Mountains 
of  Cumberland.  Da  Costa  therefore  places  it  as  a  distinct  species,  but 
expresses  some  doubt  whether  it  may  not  be  the  same  Land  Trochus 
as  Dr.  Lister  found  in  the  moss  at  the  roots  of  the  large  trees  in 
Burwell  woods,  in  Lincolnshire,  and  to  which  the  shell  found  by 
Mr.  Morton,  in  Morsley  wood,  Northamptonshire,  bears  great 
affinity.  Dr.  Lister's  shell  had  six  or  seven  wreaths,  and  Mr.  Mor- 
ton's only  five.     Mort.  Northampt.  ch.  1.  p.  415. 


11% 


-\ 


.    Is 


PLATE     CXII. 


TURBO  DUPLICATUS. 


TWO    RIDGED    SCREW  SHELL. 


GENERIC    CHARACTER. 


/ 


Animal  Limax.     Univalve,    spiral,   or  of  a  taper  form.     Aperture 
somewhat  compressed,  orbicular,  entire. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

A  NO 

SYNONYMS. 


Shell  slender,  with  two  sharp  prominent  spiral  ridges. 

Turbo   Duplicatus  :     spirse    anfractibus   carinis    duabus    acutis. 

Gmel.  Linn.  Si/st.  p.  3607.  sp.  79. 

Buccinum  crassum,  duobus  acutis,  &  insequaliter  altis  striis  in  singulis 
duodecim  minimum  spiris  donatum.     An.  Buc- 
cinum  striatum  ffaX7nv|   Fab.  Columns?  ?     List 
LI.  An.  Angl.  p.  160.  tit.  7.  tab.  3.  Jig.  7. 

Turbo  duplicatus,  doubled.     Penn.   Br.  Zeol.  No.  112.    tab.  81. 
fig.  112. 

Strombiformis  major  rubro  lutescens  aut  pullus  :  anfractibus  duabus 
carinis  sive  striis  acutis  insignitis.  Bicarinatus.  s. 
Torcular.  Da  Costa.  Br.  Conch,  p.  110.  44.— 
Tab.  6.  fig.  3. 


PLATE    CXII. 

This  species  is  admitted  as  a  British  shell  upon  the  authority  of 
Dr.  Lister,  who  says  he  had  purchased  them  of  the  Scarborough 
fishermen.  Dr.  Lister  had  not  seen  any  of  them  alive,  and  concludes 
it  must  be  a  pelagian  shell,  or  one  of  those  which  live  far  from  the 
shores. 

As  Pennant  had  inserted  this  species  in  his  British  Zoology,  upon 
this  authority,  Da  Costa  was  unwilling  to  omit  it  in  his  British 
Conchology,  yet  he  observes,  that  it  is  not  improbable  Dr.  Lister 
was  imposed  upon  by  the  fishermen,  for  the  shell  is  generally  believed 
to  be  a  native  of  the  East  Indies  ;  some  consider  it  as  a  West-Indian, 
and  others  as  an  European  species. 


i3 


\ 


/ 


\ 


PLATE     CXIII. 


MYTILUS   ANATINUS. 

SMALL    HORSE    MUSCLE. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

The  hinge  toothless,  and  consists  of  a  longitudinal  furrow. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

A  N  D 

SYNONYMS. 

.Shell  oval,  rather  compresse J,  brittle,  margin  membranaceous,  beaks 

decorticated. 

Mytilus  Anatinus  :  testa  ovali  compressiuscula  fragiiissima  mar- 
gine  membranceo,  natibus  dccorticaris.  Gmel. 
Linn.  Sj/st.  Nat.  p.  3355.  sp.  16. 

Musculus  lafus,  testa  admodum  tenui,  ex  fusco  viridescens,  interdum 
rufescens,  &c.     List.  II.  An.  Angl.  p.  14-6.  tit. 

29.  tab.  2.  Jig.  29. 

Musculus  tenuis  minor  latiusculus.     A  pp.  II.  An.  Angl.   p.  10.  tit. 

30.  tab.    I.  jig.  2.— A 'pp.   II.  An.  Angl.   in 
Goad.  p.  13.  tit.  30.  tab.  I.  fig.  2. 

Mytuii  majores  a  nostratibus.  Horse  muscles.  Merret.  Pin.  p.  193. 
Mytilus  anatinus  Duck.     Pain.  Br.  Zool.  No.  79.  tab.  63.  Jig.  79. 
Mytilus  fluviatilis  minor.     Anatinus,  Da  Costa  Br.  Conch,  p.  215. 
sp.  47.  tab.  15.  fig.  2. 


PLATE    CXIII. 

This  species  bears  much  resemblance  to  Mytilus  Cygneus,  but 
differs  in  being  only  about  half  the  size,  is  more  compressed  and 
oblong,  of  a  clearer  green  colour,  and  the  cartilage  side  extending 
in  a  straight  line  to  an  acute  angle,  like  a  fin,  and  thence  continuing 
in  an  oblique  line  towards  the  bottom,  where  it  is  rounded. — Ex- 
tremely common  in  rivers  and  stagnant  waters. 

Pennant's  shell  is  much  broader  in  proportion  than  our  specimens. 


PLATE     CXIV. 


SOLEN  ANTIQUATUS. 

ANTIQUATED  SOLEN,    OR  RAZOR  SHELL. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Bivalve,  with  equal  valves,  oblong  ;  open  at  both  ends.  At  the 
hinge  a  subulated  tooth  turned  back,  often  double  ;  not  inserted  in 
the  opposite  shell.     Animal  an  Ascidia. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Oval  oblong,  semipellucid,  lower  margin  sinuous  in  the  middle. 

Solen  Chama-Solen  :  testa  ovali-oblonga  subpellucida,  sinuosa. 

Da  Costa.  Br.  Conch,  p.  238.  sp.  62. 
Chama  angustior,  ex  altera  parte  sinuosa.    List.  H.  Conch,  tab.  421. 

fig.  265. 
Solen  Cultellus,  Kidney.    Penn.  Brit.  Zool.  No.  25.  tab.  46.  fig.  25. 


This  is  perhaps  the  rarest  species  of  the  Solen  genus  found  upon 
the  British  coasts,  and  as  Pennant  observes,  seems  to  connect  the 
Solen  with  the  Mva  genera.     It  borders  on  the  Chama  of  Da  Costa, 


PLAT  E     CXIV. 

•who  therefore  calls  it  Solen  Chama-Solen.  Pennant  notes  it  from 
Weymouth,  and  Da  Costa  received  it  from  the  shores  of  Dorset- 
shire and  Hampshire. 

Pennant  has  mistaken  this  for  a  very  distinct  shell,  described  by 
Linnaeus,  under  the  name  of  Solen  Cultellus. 


JL 


\ 


PLATE     CXV. 

VENUS  CANCELLATA. 

MEMBRANACEOUS  FENUS. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Bivalve.     Hinge  furnished  with  three  teeth  ;  two  near  each  other, 
the  third  divergent  from  the  beaks. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Somewhat   heart   shaped  with    remote    transverse   membranaceous 
ridges  ;  a  cordiform  depression  on  the  slope  under  the  beaks. 

Venus  Cancellata  :  teste  striis  transversis  membranaceis  remotis, 
Ano  cordato.    Gruel.  Linn.  Syst.  p.  3270.  sp.  8. 

Pectunculus  strigis  transversis  remotis,  acutis,  membranaceis,  donatus 
Membranaceous.  Da  Costa  Br.  Conch,  p.  193. 
sp.  29.  tab.  13.  Jig.  4.  right  hand. 


Da  Costa  described  this  shell  from  a  specimen  in  the  collection  of 
the  late  Dr.  Fothergill.     It  is  from  the  Western  coast. 

The  shell  figured  by  Pennant,  No.  48.  A.  PI.  48,  as  a  Worn 
shell  of  Venus  Erycina,  is  probably  of  this  species ;  for  it  seems  en- 
tirely destitute  of  the  longitudinal  undulations  that  decussate  the 
transverse  ridges  in  Venus  Erycina. 

VOL.  IV,  b 


PLATE     CXVI. 


OSTREA    LINEATA. 


LINEATED  SCALLOP. 


GENERIC    CHARACTER. 


Animal  a  Tethys.     Shell  bivalve,   unequal.     The  hinge  without  a. 
tooth,  having  a  small  oval  cavity. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 


SYNONYMS. 


Valves  nearly  equal,  thin  :  one  white,  the  other  marked  with  a  single 

purple  line  down  each  rib. 

Ostrea  Line ata  :  testa  subaequivalvi  tenui,  valva  una  alba,  alte- 
rius  singulis  costis  linea  purpurascenti. 

Pectunculus,  mediocris,  feie  aequivalvis,  tenuis,  valva  una  alba,  altera 
vero  cum  linea  purpurascente  in  summitate  una- 
quaeque  costs.  Lineatus.  Da  Costa  Br.  Conch. 
p.  147.  sp.  4.   Tab.  \0.fig.  8. 


This  elegant  shell  seems  to  be  described  only  by  Da  Costa  ;  he 
«ays  he  was  informed  it  had  been  fished  up  about  Weymouth,  in  Dor- 
setshire, but  had  only  seen  it  from  Cornwall.  We  have  it  from  the 
coast  of  Devonshire  also,  from  which  it  appears  an  inhabitant  of  the 
vveitern  coast  in  general,  though  it  is  very  rarely  met  with. 


w 


PLATE     CXVII. 


PHOLAS    STRIATA. 


STRIATED  PIDDOCK. 


GENERIC    CHARACTER. 


Animal  ascidia.  Shell  bivalve,  opening  wide  at  each  end,  with 
several  lesser  valves  at  the  hinge.  The  hinges  folded  back  and  con- 
nected by  a  cartilage. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 


AND 


SYNONYMS. 

Shell  ovate,  with  numerous  striat. 

Pholas  striata  :  testa  ovata  multifarium  striata.     Gmel.  Linn. 
Si/st.  p.  3215.  sp.  3. 
Act.  Angl.  55.  t.  \.f.  1,  2,  3,  4. 
Gualt.  Test.  t.  105.  F. 


Extremely  rare  as  a   British  species,   and  not   noticed  by  either 
Pennant  or  Da  Costa.     In  the  collection  of  the  Rev.  T.  Rackett. 


V*L.    IV. 


Il'd 


X 


PLATE     CXVIIL 

PHOLAS    DACTYLUS. 

PRICKLY  PADDOCK. 
GENERIC  CHARACTER. 

Animal  ascidia.  Shell  bivalve,  opening  wide  at  each  end,  with 
several  lesser  valves  at  the  hinge.  The  hinges  folded  back  and  con- 
nected by  a  cartilage. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 
SYNONYMS. 

Shell  oblong,  striated  transversely,  and  reticulated  on  the  upper  part 

with  little  spines. 

Pholas  Dactylus:  testa  oblonga  hinc  reticulato-striata.  Gmtl. 
Linn.  Sy st.  p.  3214. 

Pholas  rostrarus  major  diepensis  vulgo  Gallice   Piteau  dictus.     App. 

H.  An.  Angl.  in  Goed.  p.  37.  tab.  2.  fig.  3. 

Pholas  striatus,  sinuatus  ex  altera  parte.  Hist. 
Conch,  tab.  433.  fig.  276.— Pholas  alte  striatus, 
ex  altera  parte  sinuatus,  eadem  mucronatus,  Hist. 
nost.  Conch.  Anglice  Piddocks,  Gallics  Pitau  ; 
earumque  piscatories  pitau  quieres.  Excrcit. 
Anat.  3.  p.  83.  tab.  7.  fig.  1,  2.  Pholas  an- 
gustiua ;  oblong  Pierce  stone  or  Pholade.     Petii. 


PLATE    CXVIII. 

Gaz.  tab.  79. Jig.  10. — Picklocks.     Bale  Uarw. 
p.  389.     Pholas  Dactyl  us,  Dactyle.     Penn.  Br. 

Zcol.  p.  76.  sp.  10. 

Pholas  angustius  striatus  &  veluti  aculeatus.     Muricatus.     Da  Costa 

Br.  Conch,  p.  244.  sp.  65.  tab.  16.  fig.  2.  2. 


This  species  burrows  or  pierces  into  rocks,  where  it  forms  large 
cylindrical  cavities.  It  is  not  uncommon  on  many  of  our  coasts,  and 
is  sometimes  eaten  ;  it  is  in  season  in  the  Spring. 


) 


J 


J 


L9 


PLATE     CXIX. 

MUREX  ANTIQUUM 

ANTIQUATED    MUREX, 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Spiral,    rough.     The  aperture,  ending   in  a    strait,  and  somewhat 
produced  gutter  or  canaliculation. 

i 

SPECIFIC  CHARACTER. 

Tail  patulous :    Shell    oblong,   of    eight  spires :    spiral    ridges 

tuberculated. 

Murex  Antiquus  :  testa  patulo-caudata  oblonga:  anfractibus  octo 
teretibus.  Faun.  Suec.  2165. — Gmel.  T,  1, 
Jig.  6.  p.  3546. 


In  the  description  of  Plate  CIX.  our  reafon  for  considering  this 
and  Murex  Carinatus  as  two  distinct  species,  are  briefly  stated  ;  and 
the  difference,  it  is  presumed,  will  be  farther  apparent  on  comparing 
the  two  shells  figured  in  that,  and  the  annexed  Plate. 

Reversed  shells  of  this  species  have  been  sometimes  found.     It  is 
an  inhabitant  of  the  northern  parts  of  Europe, 
VOL.  IV.  D 


J  I 


"-S 


PLATE    CXX. 

FIG.  I. 
BULLA  APERTA. 

OPEN   BULLA    OR   BUBBLE. 
GENERIC  CHARACTER. 

Shell  suboval,     Aperture  oblong,  very  patulous,  and  smooth  or  even. 

One  end  convoluted. 

SPECIFIC   CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  almoft  entirely  open,  subrotund,  pellucid,  and  faintly  striated 

transversely. 

Bulla  Aperta  :  testa  subrotunda  pellucida  transversim  substriata 
tota  hiante.  Gmel.  Linn.  Sj/st.  Nat.  T.  1. 
p.  6.  sp.  3424.  sp.  8. 

Bulla  pellucida,  fragilissima,  tota  hians,  s.  apertura  amplissima, 
Da  Costa.  Brit.  Conch,  p.  30.  sp.  16. 


Da  Costa  says,  all  the  shells  of  this  species  he  knew,  were  fished  up 
near  Weymouth  in  Dorsetshire,  and  not  any  where  else  on  the 
British  coast ;  they  are  even  not  frequent  there ;  so  that  it  seems  a 
rare  as  well  as  curious  shell. — To  this  we  may  add,  that  they  are 

D  2 


PLATE    CXX. 

rare  only  because  they  are  local :  in   one  part  of  the  sandy  bay  of 
Caermarthen,  below  Tenby,  we  found  them  in  abundance. 

It  is  called  "  the  Bubble"  by  this  writer;  who  observes  that  it 
exactly  resembles  a  bubble  or  bladder  of  water.  The  aperture  is  so 
extremely  large  that  the  whole  shell  lies  open  to  view.  The  contour 
is  somewhat  oval,  and  slightly  involuted ;  and  the  shell  is  not 
umbilicated. 

This  is  certainly  not  Bulla  patula  of  Pennant  (Brit.  Zool.  No.  85.  A.) 
as  Da  Costa  and  Ginelin  imagine.  The  figures  in  that  work  are 
sometimes  calculated  to  mislead  the  most  attentive;  but  as  we  are  in 
possession  of  the  shell  Pennant  describes,  we  can  venture  to  say 
the  two  former  writers  are  mistaken.  The  species  Aperta  was 
unknown  to  Pennant,  and  the  shell  he  figured  from  the  Portland 
Cabinet,  under  the  specific  name  of  Patub,  is  extremely  rare. 


*m 


FIG.  II. 
BULLA  CYLINDRICA. 

NARROW  BULLA. 
SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Shell  cylindric,   smooth,  white,  and  thin. 

Bulla  Cylindrica:  testa  cylindrica  Isevi  alba  tenuissima.    Gmel, 

T.\.  p.  6.  p.  3433.  sp.  38. 


PLATE    CXX. 

This  is  a  very  scarce  species  on  our  coasts,  and  approaches  so  nearly 
to  Bulla  pallida  of  Da  Costa  (Voluta  pallida.  Linn.)  described  and 
figured  in  Plate  LXV1.  of  this  Work,  that  it  may  easily  be 
confounded  with  it,  unless  the  two  shells  be  compared.  Bulla 
Cylindrica  differs  in  being  rather  more  compressed,  and  has  the  pillar- 
lip  perfectly  smooth  ;  while  on  the  contrary  the  other  has  plaits  or 
wrinkles  upon  this  part  as  before  observed  :  a  circumstance  that 
constitutes  one  character  of  the  Yoluta  genus  in  the  system  of 
Linnaeus. 


In  the  description  of  the  Voluta  pallida  we  were  led  to  think 
with  Da  Costa,  that  the  shell  figured  by  Pennant  in  the  British 
Zoology,  No.  85.  A.  might  be  of  the  same  species.  Since  that 
time  we  have  been  favoured  with  the  specimen  figured  in  the  annexed 
Plate;  and  as  it  seems  to  correspond  more  clearly  with  Pennant's 
shell  than  the  other,  there  can  be  no  impropriety  in  removing  the 
reference  from  the  former  to  the  prefent  species.  Gmelin  takes 
not  the  slightest  notice  of  this  figure  of  Pennant ;  so  that  we  must 
remain  ignorant  of  his  opinion  respecting  it.  And  it  is  certain  the. 
shell  before  us  was  altogether  unknown  to  Da  Costa, 


D  % 


10.1 


X 


PLATE    CXXI. 


VENUS  UNDATA. 


IVAVED    VENUS. 


GENERIC    CHARACTER. 


Bivalve.     Hinge  furnished  with  three  teeth ;  two  near  each  other, 
the  third  divergent  from  the  beaks. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 


Shell  orbiculated,  convex,  'thin,  transversely  marked  with  very  fine 
stria?,  and  waved  at  the  margin. 

Venus  Undata:  testa  orbiculata  convexa  tenui  transversim  subti- 
lissime  striata  margine  undata. 

Venus  Undata,  waved.— With  thin,  convex,  orbiculated  shells, 
of  a  white  colour,  tinged  with  yellow,  and 
marked  with  thin  concentric  stria ;  waved  at  the 
edges.     Perm.  Brit.  Zeol.  4.  sp.  51. 


There  can  be  no  doubt  that  the  shell  figured  and  defcribed  by 
Pennant  in  the  fourth  volume  of  his  British  Zoology,  No,  51,  is  of 


D  4 


PLATE    CXXI. 

the  fame  fpecies  as  our  shell.  That  author  says  it  is  the  size  of  a 
hazel  nut,  from  which  it  appears  the  fpecimen  he  faw  was  a  young 
Shell ;  the  largest  of  our  specimens  being  of  the  size  represented  ia 
the  annexed   Plate. 

This  is  Venus  laciea  of  some  cabinets,  a  name  sufficiently  ex- 
pressive of  its  colour,  but  having  been  before  called  Undata  by 
Pennant,  we  thought  it  best  to  retain  the  name  he  had  given  it. 


X2.2. 


PLATE     CXXII. 


MYA    OVATA. 


OVATE    MYA. 


GENERIC   CHARACTER. 


Animal  an  afcidia.  Shell  bivalve,  gaping  at  one  end.  The  hinge 
for  the  most  part  furnished  with  a  thick,  strong,  and  broad  tooth,  not 
inferted  in  the  opposite  valve. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Shell  oblong-ovate;  posterior  part  roundish,  and  very  slightly  gaping ; 
first  tooth  at  the  hinge  crenulated. 

Mya  ovata  :  testa  oblongo-ovata,  postice  rotundata  vix  hiante,  car- 
dinis  dente  primario  crenulato. 


This  is  the  Shell  alluded  to  in  the  description  of  Plate  101,  under 
the  name  of  Mya  ovata.  The  difference  between  it  and  Mya  depressa, 
as  before  observed,  seems  to  consist  in  the  present  being  more  ovate, 
and  not  depressed  across  the  middle :  nor  is  the  gaping  at  the  broadest 
end  so  considerable  as  in  the  other. 

These,  we  have  already  remarked,  inhabit  the  same  waters  as  Mya 
depressa,  viz.  in  the  New   River,  near  London,  and  the  Froomc  in 


PLATE    CXXII. 


Somerfetshire.  It  is  a  thick,  strong  and  heavy  Shell,  of  a  greenish 
colour,  and  radiated. — The  smallest  figure  in  the  annexed  plate  is  a 
brown  coloured  specimen  of  Mya  depressa. 


— - 


A 


\ 


PLATE     CXXIII. 

TELLINA    INiEQUISTRIATA. 

UNEQUALLY-STRIATED    TELLEN. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

The  hinge  usually  furnished  with  three  teeth.   Shell  generally  sloping 

on  one  side. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Shell  ovate,  compressed  and  rather  flatfish,  rosy,  very  finely  striated 
transversely:  the  striae  fewer  and  larger  at  the  anterior  end. 

Tellina  iNiEQUiSTRiATA  :  testa  ovata  compresso-planiuscula  rosea 
subtilissime  transversim  striata  :  strns  antenus 
paucioribus  majoribusque. 


A  very  rare  species  of  Tellina  communicated  to  Da  Costa  after  his 
Conchology  was  published,  and  therefore  not  noticed  in  that  work. 
It  has  been  found  by  the  late  Dr.  Pulteney  we  believe  on  the  coast 
of  Dorsetshire. 


PLATE    CXXIV. 

* 

FIG.  I. 

ARDIUM    EDULE. 

COMMON   COCKLE. 
GENERIC   CHARACTER. 

Two  teeth  near  the  beak ;  and  another  remote  one,  on  each  side  of 

the  shell. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  antiquated :  about  twenty-six  grooves,  with  obsolete  recurved 

scales. 

Cardium  edule  :   testa  antiquata;  sulcis  viginti  sex  obsolete  re- 

curvato  imbricatis.     Limis—Gmel.  T.  I.  p.  6. 

p.  3252.  sp.  20. 
Pectunculus  vulgaris,  albidus,  subrotundus,  circiter  viginti-sex 

striis  majusculis  at  planioribus  donatus.  Da  Costa, 

Brit.  Conch,  p.  180.  sp.  19. 
Cardium  Edule,  Edible  Cockle.    Pi-mi,  Brit,  Zool  NoAl.  tab,  50. 

fg.U. 


PLATE    CXXIV. 

The  Common  Cockle  is  abundant  on  all  sandy  shores  :  they  lurk 
in  the  sand,  and  their  hiding-place  is  known  by  a  little  round  depressed 
spot  upon  the  surface.  Cockles  are  in  season  from  autumn  till  spring: 
they  are  a  wholesome  and  palatable  food;  and  thofe  from  Selfea, 
near  Chichester,  are  esteemed  the  most  delicious  in  England. 

These  Shells  vary  a  little  both  in  shape  and  colour :  the  two  fpe- 
cimens  figured  on  the  annexed  Plate  differ,  one  being  more  orbicular 
than  the  other.  They  are  generally  whitish,  sometimes  they  have  a 
blueish,  and  sometimes  a  yellowish  tint. 


FIG.    II. 
CARDIUM    RUSTICUM? 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Shell  antiquated,  with  about  twenty  remote  grooves :  the  interftices 

rugged. 

Caroium  rusticum  :  testa  antiquata  :  sulcis  viginti  remotis ;  in- 
terstitiis  rugosis.  Gmelin,  T.  1.  p.  6.  p.  3252. 
sp.  23  ? 


Notwithstanding  the  endless  variations  to  which  the  shells  of  the 
common  Cockle  are  liable,  this  appears  too  remote  to  be  admitted  as 
one  of  them.  It  passes  for  Cardium  rusticum  with  some  concholo* 
gifts,  and  though  it  may  not  strictly  agree  with  that  specific  descrip- 
tion of  Gmelin,  it  approaches  nearer  to  it  than  to  edule.     That  author 


PLATE    CXXIV. 

notices  the  affinity  rusticum  bears  to  the  other  species ;  but  observes 
that  the  grooves  are  deeper  and  the  ribs  fewer,  and  more  convex  in 
rusticum  :  he  remarks  also  that  the  latter  has  a  ridge  on  the  anterior 
margin  when  the  valves  are  closed,  and  a  narrow  depressure  behind 
the  beaks,  "  ano  evidente,  sed  angusto,"  which  is  not  in  the  other. 
The  grooves  in  our  Shell  are  not  so  deep  as  "  sulcis  profundioribus" 
implies,  but  they  are  both  deeper  and  wider  than  in  the  common 
sort ;  the  ribs  are  rather  more  convex  also,  fewer  in  number,  and 
rugged,  as  Gmelin  describes  it. — The  colour  exactly  corresponds : 
he  says  it  is  sometimes  ferruginous,  with  livid  bands  and  sometimes 
white,  with  the  anterior  part  fuscous :  another  variety  of  it  is  white, 
fasciated  with  a  ferruginous  yellowish  or  blueish  colour. 


125 


PLATE    CXXV. 


MACTRA   GLAUCA. 


GLAUCOUS   MACTRA. 


GENERIC    CHARACTER, 


t 


Animal  a  Tethys,  Bivalve,  sides  unequal.     Middle  tooth  compile 
cated,  with  a  little  groove  on  each  side ;  lateral  teeth  remote. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 


Shell  ovate,  sordid  white  with  brown   (or  glaucous)  rays :  very 
finely  lariated  transversely,  and  wrinkled  on  the  anterior  end. 
Mactra  Glauca  :    testa  ovata  sordide  alba  glauco    radiara   sub- 

tilissime  transversim  striata  anterius  rugosa.    Gmel. 

T.  I.  p.  6.  p.  3260.  fp.  20. 
Chemn.  Conch.  6.  t.  23./.  232,  233. 


This  is  a  new  species  as  a  British  shell ;  and  the  conchologist  is 
indebted  to  Miss  Pocock  for  the  discovery  of  it  on  our  coair.     The 
attention  with  which  this  lady  has  honoured  the  science  has  not  been 
rewarded  by  this  new  species  only  :  we  have  been   favoured  ■ 
several  others,  besides   many  rare  kinds  that  have 

VOL.    IV.  E 


PLATE    CXXV. 

her  on  different  parts  of  the  sea-coast,  and  especially  on  that  o: 
Cornwall,  as  will  appear  hereafter.    A  few  shells  of  the  species  before 
us  were  met  with  by  her  in  the  summer  of  1801,  on  Hale  sands  under 
Lelant  in  that  county,  and  it  is  said  by  the  country  people  they  are 
at  times  found  on  that  coaft  in  some  plenty. 


Though  hitherto  unknown  as  a  British  shell,  it  has  been  before 
discovered  in  the  Mediterranean  sea ;  for  there  can  be  no  hesitation 
in  admitting  it  to  be  the  shell  figured  by  Chemnitz,  as  above  quoted. 
Gmelin  refers  to  the  two  figures  in  that  Work,  No.  232,  and  233, 
for  his  species  glauca  ;  and  the  description  corresponds  in  general 
with  them,  though  not  exactly  in  the  colour  of  the  rays. — Gmelir} 
has  another  species  of  Mactra,  grandis,  which  we  at  first  suspected 
to  be  the  same  as  our  shell.  It  agrees  precisely  in  the  colour  of 
the  rays,  but  from  the  figure  in  Chemnitz's  work,  quoted  by  Gmelin 
for  that  species,  these  rays,  it  appears,  are  far  more  minute,  than  in 
our  shell,  and  are  also  decussated  by  others  in  a  concentric  direction  j, 
s— the  outline  of  the  Jatter  is  also  different* 


L2.6 


PLATE     CXXVL 

MACTRA SUBTRUNCTA. 

SUBTRUNCATED    MACTRA. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Animal  a  Tethys.    Bivalve,  sides  unequal.    Middle  tooth  complicated, 
with  a  little  groove  on  each  side  :  lateral  teeth  remote. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell    somewhat    triangular,    whitish,    smooth,    subtruncated    o» 

each  side. 

Mactra  subtruncata  :    testa    subtriangularis,   albescens,  laevis 

lateribus  subtruncatis. 
Trigonella  albescens  lawis,  lateribus  subtruncatis.    Subtruncata,     Dd 

Costa.  Brit.  Conch,  p.  198.  No.  34. 


A  thick,  strong,  and  heavy  shell,  of  a  somewhat  triangular  shape, 
and  much  flattened  on  each  side,  obliquely  from  the  beaks :  the 
valves  rather  convex,  the  beaks  pointed  strong,  and  turned  inwards. 


PLATE    CXXVI. 

The  colour  is  pale  or  whitish,  and  it  is  externally  marked  with  nu- 
merous fine  concentric  striae. 


Received  from  Hampshire  and   Devonshire ;    but  not  common. 
Found  in  a  fossil  state  in  the  sand  pits  at  Woolwich. 


1- 


PLATE    CXXVII. 

TROCHUS   PAPILLOSUM 

SHAGREENED    TOP    SHELL. 
GENERIC  CHARACTER. 

Animal  a  slug.     Shell  conic.     Aperture  nearly  triangular. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Pyramidal,   umbilicated,   red ;  whorls  with  several  rows  of  minute 

granulations. 

Trochus  Papillosus  :  pvjamidalis  umbilicatus  ruber,  series  papil- 
larum  <i(>natus.  Da  Costa.  Brit.  Conch,  p.  33. 
No.  20. 

'Cul  de  lampe  a  flammes  longitudinales,  alternatives  blanches  et  rou- 
ges, a  stries  granuleuses  et  umbilique :  et  cul  de 
lampe  marbre  de  blanc  et  de  rouge,  a  stries  cir- 
culaires  granuleuses  et  tuberculeuses.  D%  Avilat 
cab.  \.p.  127,  128. 


Da  Costa  acquaints  us  that  he  received  "  some  few  of  these  shells 
from  Cornwall  (in  a  great  quantity  of  others,  natives  of  that  coast) 
by  an  intelligent  gentleman  of  veracity  and  curiosity  ;  but"  adds  that 

E3 


PLATE    CXXVII. 


writer,  "  must  own  I  have  never  met  with  this  species  since  on  any 
other  British  coasts."  We  have  since  seen  it  among  parcels  of  shells 
from  the  Mediterranean,  and  also  find  that  it  has  been  discovered  by 
the  late  Dr.  Pultney,  on  the  North  shore,  Poole  ;  and  at  Weymouth. 

The  specific  character  of  the  Gmelinian  Trochus  Granatum, 
seems  to  accord  very  nearly  with  -our  shell  *,  but  it  is  about  twice  the 
size,  and  inhabits  the  Southern  Ocean  ;  and  it  is  certainly  more  pro- 
bable, as  some  conchologists  have  suggested,  that  it  is  the  variety  of 
Trochus  Zizyphinus,  described  by  Linnasus  in  the  Mils.  Reginay 
as  being  "  tota  pallida,  anfractibus  basi  gibbis,  striatis,  subtitissime 
punctis  papilloris."  It  differs  from  Zizyphinus  in  having  the  anfrac- 
tus  a  little  rounded,  and  the  wreaths  being  encircled  with  granulated 
spiral  ridges.  The  name  Da  Costa  has  already  given  it,  is  very  ap- 
plicable ;  and  as  it  has  undoubtedly  escaped  the  notice  of  Gmelin, 
there  can  be  no  impropriety  in  retaining  it. — It  is  evidently  one  of  the 
rarest  British  species  of  the  Trochus  genus. 


*  Testa  pyramidali   alba  coccineo  varia  basi  subconvexa  ;  spirae  anfractibus  convexis: 
singulis  grar.oram  moniformibus,  primis  duobus  maximis.  Gmel.  3584.  ip.  108. 


128 


PLATE    CXXVIII. 

FIG.  1. 1. 

MYTILUS  EDULIS. 

COMMON    MUSCLE. 

# 

GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

The  hinge  toothless,  and  consists  of  a  longitudinal  furrow. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  smoothish,  violet :  valves  slightly  carinated  in  front,   retuse 

behind  :  beaks  pointed. 

MYTILUS   EDULis  :  testa  Iseviuscula  violacea :  valvis  anterius  sub* 

carinatis    posterius   retusis,     natibus   acuminatis. 

Fn.  Senc.  2156.     Gmcl.  Linn.  Sj/st.  Nat.  T.  I, 

p.  6.  p.  3353.  Sp.  11. 
Mvtilus  vulgaris.     Musculus   vulgaris   subtaevis   ex   cseruleo   nigcr. 

Common  Muscle.    Da  Costa  Brit.   Conch. 

p.  216.  fp.  48. 
Mytilus  Edulis,  Edible.     Penn.  Brit.  Zool.  T.  4.  p.  1 10.  fp,  73. 

E  4 


PLATE    CXXVIII. 

Few  species  of  the  shell  tribe  are  more  generally  diffused  through- 
out the  European  and  Indian  seas  than  the  Mytilus  edulis ;  and  few 
indeed  exhibit  such  an  infinite  number  of  varieties,  differing  in  size, 
in  form,  and  colour  ;  but  which  the  critical  Conchologist  will  yet 
perceive  cannot  with  propriety  be  assigned  to  any  other  species. 

On  the  Plate  annexed  to  this  description,  one  shell  of  the  shape 
more  uniformly  prevalent  is  figured  in  its  natural  state,  and  another, 
which,  having  been  divested  of  the  epidermis,  displays  a  beautiful 
variety  of  irregular  purple  stripes  :  an  appearance  very  common  in 
the  uncoated  shells,  and  in  some  sorts  observable  even  when  the  epi- 
dermis is  upon  them.  The  upper  and  lower  figures  are  of  two 
shells,  which,  we  are  inclined  to  think,  differ  too  widely  from  the 
common  kind  to  be  considered  as  a  variety:  the  outline  appears  at 
the  first  sight  obviously  dissimilar  ;  and  the  characters  in  general 
seem  to  mark  most  decidedly  another  species.  They  are  both  worn 
shells,  but  which  we  have  compared  with  perfect  specimens  of  My- 
tilus ungulatus,  and  apprehend  there  can  be  no  doubt  that  they 
belong  to  that  species. 

Within  the  tropics,  the  common  Muscle  is  known  to  attain  a 
much  larger  size  than  in  northern  climates.  They  are  found  in  im- 
mense beds,  and  adhere  to  other  substances,  or  to  one  another,  by 
means  of  a  beard  of  a  strong  and  silky  texture,  which  the  fish  throws 
out.  The  Muscle  affords  a  rich  and  palatable  food  ;  though  they 
are  not  deemed  wholesome  by  many  peopJe,  who  after  eating  them 
are  sometimes  afflicted  with  great  swellings  and  convulsive  motions. 
with  eruptive  blotches,  shortness  of  breath,  and  even  with  delirium. 
These  dreadful  effects  are  usually  attributed  to  some  malignant  poison 
in  the  little  pea  crab  which  is  occasionally  found  in  the  Muscle,  and 


PLATE    CXXVIIT. 

may  be  accidentally  eaten  with  it :  others  think  it  is  in  consequence 
of  swallowing  the  silky  byssus,  or  beard  ;  and  again  many  deem  the 
Muscle  itself  poisonous.  It  is,  however,  pretty  generally  agreed, 
that  they  affect  some  constitutions  more  than  others,  and  that  much 
depends  on  the  state  of  the  body  at  the  time  of  eating  them.  The 
disorder  may  be  cured,  or  at  least  its  malignity  mitigated,  by  ad- 
ministering to  the  affected  person  a  spoonful  of  vinegar :  some  re- 
commend sweet  oil,  or  salt  and  water.  Da  Costa  observes  that  su- 
dorifics,  vomits,  oils,  <kc.  are  the  usual  remedies ;  and  the  Dutch 
give  two  spoon's-full  of  oil,  and  one  of  lemon-juice  ;  or,  in  defect  of 

that,  a  little  more  vinegar,  well  shaken  together,  and  swallowed 
immediately. 

The  Muscle  is  the  prey  of  many  kino's  of  fishes,  and  other  crea- 
tures that  inhabit  the  sea.  On  the  coast  of  Greenland,  Fabricius 
tells  us,  they  are  so  abundant,  that  the  dogs  and  ravens  commonly 
feed  on  them  ;  as  do  also  the  white  game,  (Ptarmigan)  Eider  Duck, 
and  many  others. 

The  seed-pearls  found  in  the  shell  of  the  Muscle  was  formerly  in 
some  esteem,  for  medicinal  purposes  :  these,  it  is  well  known,  are 
the  effects  of  a  disease  in  the  fish,  analogous  to  the  stone  in  the 
human  body. 

Mr.  Pennant  informs  us,  that  the  finest  Muscles  on  the  English 
coasts  (where  they  are  found  in  great  abundance)  are  those  called 
Hambleton  Hookers,  from  a  village  in  the  county  of  Lancashire. 
They  are  taken  out  of  the  sea,  and  placed  in  the  river  Wier,  within 
reach  of  the  tide,  where  they  grow  very  fat  and  delicious. 


PLATE    CXXVIII. 


FIG.   II.   II. 
MYTILUS  UNGULATUS. 

CLAWED    MUSCLE. 
SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

ANII 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  smooth,  somewhat  curved  :  posterior  margin  inflected :  hinge 

terminal,  bidentated. 

Mytilus  ungulatus  :  testa  laevi  subcurvata  :  margine  posteriori 
»  inflexo,    cardine   terminali   bidentato.     Linn. — 

Gmcl.  Sj/st.  Nat.  T.  I.  p.  6.  p.  3354.  Sp.  12. 


Several  shells  of  this  kind  were  picked  up  by  Miss  Pocock,  on  the 
coast  of  Cornwall.  It  was  before  known  as  an  inhabitant  of  the 
Mediterranean,  but  not  as  a  British  species. 

Fig.  II.  II. — Upper  and  lower  Figures. 


11,) 


PLATE    CXXIX. 

PATELLA   ALBIDA. 

WHITISH    CHAMBERED    PAP-SHELL, 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Animal  a  Limax :  shell  univalve,  sub-conic  without  spire. 

SPECIFIC  CHARACTER. 

Shell  fragile,  entire,  subrotund,  whitish  ;  vertex  somewhat  central, 
and  slightly  pointed  ;  lip  within  lateral. 

Patella  albida  :    testa  fragilis    integerrima  subrotunda   albida 

vertice    subcentrali  submucronato,    labio  interio 
laterali. 


This  rare  and  nondescript  species  of  Patella  was  found  on  the 
coast  of  Cornwall,  and  communicated  by  the  lady  who  favoured  us 
with  Mactra  glauca,  and  Mytilus  ungulatus.  It  differs  from  any  of 
the  described  British  shells  of  this  genus,  in  having  an  inner  lip  or 
chamber,  such  as  is  observed  in  several  of  the  exotic  kinds,  belonging 
to  the  first  section  of  the  genus  inGmelin's  arrangement ;  "  Labiatas 
s.  labio  interno  instructs,  testa  integra." 

It  is  an  exquisitely  delicate  shell,  and  remarkably  brittle  :  there  is  a 
specimen  of  this  shell  in  the  collection  of  William  PUkington,  Esq; 
Whitehall. 


i:>,  o 


^ 


A 


m 


PLATE     CXXX. 


VENUS    BOREALIS. 

NORTHERN    VENUS, 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Hinge  furnished  with  three  teeth ;  two  near  each  other,  the  third 

divergent  from  the  beaks. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER, 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  lentiform,  with  very  remote  transverse,  erect,  membranaceous 

striae. 

Venus  Borealis  :  testa  lentiformi :  striis  transversis  membranaceis 

erectis   remotissimis.     Gmel.  Linn.  Si/st.  Nat, 
T.  I.  p.  6.  p.  3235.  sp.  77. 


This  is  a  scarce,  or  very  local  shell  on  the  British  coasts,  and  seems 
to  agree  with  the  description  of  the  Linnasan  Venus  borealis.  The 
species  was  unknown  to  Da  Costa,  and  is  different  from  that  which 
Mr.  Penant  describes  under  the  same  name. 


PLATE    CXXX. 

We  first  discovered  it  on  the  coast  of  South  Wales  ;  and  since 
that  time  have  received  it  from  Miss  Pocock,  by  whom  it  was  found 
on  the  coasts  of  Cornwall  in  some  plenty. 


73* 


PLATE    CXXXL 

HELIX   HORTENS1S. 

GARDEN    SNJIL. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Aperture  of  the  mouth  contracted  and  Iunulated. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

ANO 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  imperforate,  globose ;  spotted  and  fasciated  with  brown:  lip 

white. 

Helix  Hortensis  :  testa  imperfo rata  globosa:  labro  albo.     Mull. 

Zool.  Dan. — Gmel.  Linn.  Sj/st.  Nat.  T.  I.  p.  Q. 

p.  3649.  sp.  109. 
Cochlea  vulgaris  fusca,  maculata  &:  fasciata.    Vulgaris.    Da  Costat 

Brit.  Conch,  p.  72.  sp.  39. 
Helix  Hortensis.     Garden    Snail.      Penn.  Brit.   Zool.   No.   129. 

tab.  84.  fig.  129. 
Helix  Lucorum.     Linn. 


The  Common  Garden  Snail  is,  we  think,  without  doubt,  the  Helix 
^ucorum  of  Linnaeus,  and  most  other  writers.     Gmelin  calls  it  hor- 


PLATE    CXXXI. 

tensis,  and  defines  the  specific  character  of  lucorum  to  be  "  testa 
imperforata  subrotunda  Isevi  fasciata  :  apertura  oblongo  fusca."  It 
more  generally  inhabits  the  southern  parts  of  Europe ;  is  larger,  and 
whiter  than  hortensis  ;  and  the  lip  is  brown. 

This  is  a  most  variable  species  in  its  colours  and  markings,  and  it 
may  still  be  doubted  whether  hortensis  and  lucorum  be  perfectly 
distinct.  They  have  certainly  been  confounded  by  almost  every 
Conchologist. 

On  the  manners  of  a  creature  which  is  so  generally  known,  as 
the  Common  Garden  Snail,  it  is  surely  needless  to  enlarge  :  its  mode 
of  courtship  is,  however,  so  curiously  related,  that  it  should  not  en- 
tirely escape  remark  ;  and  were  it  not  attested  by  writers  of  the  first 
authority,  with  the  reader,  we  might  be  guilty  of  no  small  degree 
of  scepticism,  as  to  believing  it.  Each  of  these  animals,  it  seems, 
are  furnished,  at  a  certain  season,  with  a  number  of  little  pointed 
darts,  which  are  contained  within  a  cavity  on  the  right  side 
of  the  neck.  When  the  Snails  approach  within  two  or  three 
inches  of  each  other,  a  scene  of  hostility  is  observed  to  com- 
mence :  each  discharging  at  its  antagonist  these  darts,  with  con- 
siderable force,  at  the  other ;  this  battle  continues  till  the  reservoir 
be  exhausted  of  these  offensive  weapons,  and  then  a  perfect  re- 
conciliation takes  place  between  them.  .  The  eggs  are  about  the  size 
of  peas,  and  perfectly  round. 

Snails  are  used  with  success  in  some  consumptive  cases,  and  an 
excellent  cement,  to  fasten  china,  may  be  made  of  the  saliva,  or  hu- 
mours,   mixed  with  quick   lime   and  white  of  eggs,  according  to 


PLATE    CXXXL 

Lister,  See.  It  feeds  on  all  kinds  of  vegetables  and  fruits,  and  is  con- 
sequently very  destructive  in  orchards  and  gardens.  Snails  couple 
about  May  or  June. 


VOL.   IV. 


,'32. 


PLATE    CXXXII. 

PHOLAS    CANDIDA. 

WHITE    PJDDOCK. 
GENERIC   CHARACTER. 

Animal  Ascidia.  Shell  bivalve,  opening  wide  at  each  end,  with 
several  lesser  valves  at  the  hinge.  The  hinges  folded  back  and  con- 
nected by  a  cartilage. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER, 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  oblong,  muricated  with  striae  crossing  each  other. 

Pholas  Candida  :  testa  oblonga  undique  striis  decussatis  muricata. 

Mus.  Lud.  Ulr.  469.  n.  7. — Gmel.  Linn.  Si/st. 

Nat.  T.  \.p.  6.  p.  3215.  sp.  4. 
Pholas  tenuis-  candidus  ovatus  decussatim  striatus.     Candidus.    Da 

Costa.  Brit.  Conch,  p.  246.  sp.  66. 
Concha  Candida,  dupliciter  striata  et  veluti  aculeata.    List.  II.  An. 

Angl.  p.  193.  tit.  39.  tab.  5.  fig.  39. — Pholas 

alter.      App.  II.  An.  Angl.  in   Goed.  p.  37. 

tab.  2.  fig.  4  and  6. — Pholas  parvus  asper.     H, 

Conch,  tab.  435. fig.  218. 
Pholas  latus;  short  Pierce-stone  or  Pholade.     Petiv.  Gaz.  tab.  79. 

}  #.". 

Pholas  candidus.     Penn.  Brit.  Zool.  T.  4.  No,  11.  tab.  3d,fig.  11. 


PLATE    CXXXII. 

The  Pholas  Candida  is  rather  a  scarce  species,  and  differs  from  P. 
Dactylus  (hians  of  Dr.  Solander)  in  not  being  above  one  fourth  of  its 
size  :  of  a  more  oval  shape,  and  having  both  ends  equally  rounded  ; 
in  other  respects  it  resembles  it.  Da  Costa  seems  to  entertain  some 
doubt  whether  it  may  not  be  really  a  variety  in  growth,  than  a  dis- 
tinct species  from  Dactylus.  It  is  found  on  the  same  coasts  as  the 
latter. 


.m 


a" 


PLATE     CXXXIII. 

SABELLA  TUB1FORMIS. 

STRAIGHT  TUBE  SABELLA,    OR  SAND  SHELL. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Animal  a  Nereis,  with  a  ringent  mouth,  and  two  thicker  tentacula 
behind  the  head.  Shell  tubular,  and  composed  chiefly  of  sand,  agglu- 
tinated to  a  membranaceous  tube. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  solitary,  simple,  tube-shaped,  straight ;  gradually  tapering  ;  and 

composed  of  brownish  sand. 

Sabella  tubiformis  :  testa  solitaria  simplici  tubiformi  recta  sen- 
sim  attenuata  :  granis  arenaceis  fuscis. 

Sabella  granulata.     Linn.  1268  ? — Martini,  4.  /.  4.  28  ? 

Sabella  tubiformis.  Tube  Sabella.  Penn.  Brit.  Zool.  4. 
sp.  163. 

Straight  Sabella.     Pult.  Hist.  Dorset. 


The  Sabella  tubiformis  of  Pennant  is  believed  by  some  concholo- 
gists  to  be  the  same  species  as  Linnaeus  names  granulata,  but  this 
must  certainly  admit  of  doubt:  the  latter,  from  the  description,  ap- 

VOL. IV.  g 


PLATE    CXXXIII. 

pears  to  be  slightly  incurvated,  whilst  Pennant's  shell  is  perfectly 
straight ;  a  difference,  perhaps,  sufficient  to  constitute  two  distinct 
species.  Martini  figures  a  kind  of  Sabella,  which  he  considers  as 
the  S.  granulata  of  Linnaeus,  and  in  that  figure  the  curvature  at  the 
narrowest  end  is  very  apparent :  with  Martini  we  consider  that  as 
the  true  Sabella  granulata  of  Linnaeus,  and  not  having  observed  the 
same  character  in  any  of  those  shells  that  have  occurred  to  notice  on 
our  own  coasts,  have  thought  it  most  adviseable  to  retain  the  name 
Mr.  Pennant  had  previously  given  it. 

Gmelin  seems  to  be  under  some  doubts  respecting  this  shell,  for 
he  entirely  omits  the  Linnaean  granulata  among  the  species  of  this 
genus. — Sabella  Belgica  of  Gmelin,  which  some  have  conjectured 
to  be  the  S.  tubiformis  of  Pennant,  is  undoubtedly  different,  ac- 
cording to  Klein  and  Martini. 

Our  shell  is  of  an  elegant  form  and  remarkably  delicate  :  it  con- 
sists of  two  coatings,  the  inner  one  of  which  is  composed  entirely 
of  grains  of  sand,  and  the  outer  one  of  sand  intermixed  with  little 
fragments  of  shells.  This  kind  is  local :  it  is  supposed  to  inhabit 
deep  waters  only,  and  is  sometimes  found  upon  the  shore  after  a 
high  sea. 


/ 


PLATE    CXXXIV, 

CHAMA  COR. 

HEART-SHAPED    CHAMA. 
GENERIC   CHARACTER. 

Animal  a  Tethys.  Shell  bivalve,  and  rather  coarse.  Hinge  with 
a  callous  gibbosity,  obliquely  inserted  into  an  oblique  hollow  :  ante- 
rior slope  closed. 

SPECIFIC  CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 
/ 

Shell   subrotund,   and    smooth :    beaks     recurved :    anterior  slope 

gaping. 

Chama  Cor  :  testa  subrotunda  la?vi :  natibus  recurvatis  rimahiante. 

Mus.  Lud.  Ulr.  516.  ra.88. — Gmel.  Sj/st.  Nat. 
T.  1.  p.  6.  p.  3299.  sp.  1. 


As  an  inhabitant  of  the  Mediterranean,  the  Adriatic,  and  Caspian 
sea,  this  curious  shell  has  been  long  since  known ;  but  as  a  British 
species  has  not  been  before  described.  It  was  discovered  several  years 
ago  in  the  seas  about  the  islands  in  the  North  of  Scotland,  by  Mr. 
Agneu,  Gardener  to  the  late  Duchess  of  Portland ;  and  since  that 

G  2 


PLATE    CXXXIV. 

time,  a  specimen  of  it  was  dredged  up,  by  T.  Swainson,  Esq.  of  the 
Custom-house,  London. 

It  is  a  delicate  shell,  and  represented  in  the  annexed  plate  of  the 
natural  size.  By  some  it  is  called  the  BulPs-heart  Cockle,  but  very 
improperly,  because  it  cannot  be  considered  in  any  manner  of  the 
Cardium  genus. 


ns 


''-  'I.!.';!!    i 


iz£z 


% 


PLATE    CXXXV. 


ARCA    LACTEA. 


MILKY-WHITE   ARK. 


GENERIC   CHARACTER. 


Bivalve,  valves  equal.     Teeth  of  the  hinge  numerous,  and  inserted 

between  each  other. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 


AND 


SYNONYMS. 

Shell   somewhat    rhombic,    with  obsolete,   decussated    striae,    and 

diaphanous. 

Arca  lactea  :     testa  subrhomboidea  obsolete  decussatim  striata 

diaphana.     Gmel.  Linn.  Sj/st.  Nat.  T,  I.  p.  6. 

p.  3309.  sp.  15. 
Arca  lactea:    testa   subrhomboidea  obsolete  decussatim  striata 

diaphana,  natibus   recurvis,    margine   crenulato. 

Linn.  Sj/st.  Nat.  p.  1141.  No.  173. 
Pectunculus  exiguus  albus,    admodum  tenuiter  striatas.     List.  H» 

Conch,  tab.  235.  Jig.  69. 
Mytulus  Garnseiae  albus,  parvus  tenuiter  cancellatus.     Petiv.  Gaz.^ 

tab.  IZ.jig.  1. 

C3 


PLATE    CXXXV. 

Area.     Parva  alba  cancellata.     Lactea.     Da   Costa  Brit.    Conch. 

p.  171.  sp.  14. 
Arca  crinita.     Soland.  Mus.  Portland. 

Pultney.  Nat.  Hist.  Dor  sets. 


There  does  certainly  exist  among  conchologists  a  strange  dis- 
cordance of  opinion,  respecting  the  species  of  Arca  before  us :  some 
believing  it  to  be  the  very  shell  which  Linnaeus  described  under  the 
name  of  lactea,  and  others  maintaining  the  contrary.  Dr.  Solander, 
and  Dr.  Pultney,  were  persuaded  that  Linnaeus  intended  a  shell  in 
some  particulars  not  unlike  this,  but  specifically  different :  the  same 
shell  in  fact  which  Lister  figures  No.  67,  in  his  Conchology.  The 
opinions  of  two  such  respectable  naturalists  deserve  every  considera- 
tion, but  however  we  may  be  disposed  to  abide  by  their  authority  in 
some  instances,  we  cannot,  for  the  following  reasons,  assent  to  it  in 
the  present. 

Dr.  Pultney  premises  his  description  by  naming  this  species  Arca 
crinita,  a  name  which  it  appears  Dr.  Solander  had  previously  given 
to  it,  in  his  catalogue  of  the  Portland  Museum  :  he  observes  very 
justly,  that  it  is  the  A.  barbata  of  Pennant,  but  not  the  barbata  of 
Linnaeus:  refers  to  Da  Costa's  figure,  Plate  11,  fig.  5  ;  and  calls  it 
in  English  the  Hairy  Ark-shell.  His  description  is  in  these 
words,  "  A  small  oblong  subrhomboidal  shell:  in  its  recent  state 
covered  with  a  brown  epidermis.  Underneath  the  shell  is  minutely 
striated  in  the  longitudinal  direction  ;  commonly  not  much  larger 
than  a  horse-bean.  I  found  one  on  the  North  shore  at  Poole,  more 
than  half  an  inch  long,  and  seven-eights  wide.  It  is  said  to  be 
more  frequent  on  the  shores  of  Guernsey  island ;  but  is  very  rare  oa 


PLATE    CXXXV. 

our  coasts.  This  shell  has  commonly  been  described  as  the  A.  lactea 
of  Linnaeus  ;  but  that  shell  is  much  larger,  and  is  strongly  striated 
in  a  reticulated  manner." 

In  the  first  place,  this  does  not  so  clearly  agree  with  the  Linnaean 
description  as  might  be  expected.    In  the  early  editions  of  the  Sy  sterna, 
Naturte,  Linnaeus  expressly  describes  his  shell  as  being  of  a  sub- 
rhombic  form,  with  obsolete  decussating  striae,  diaphanous,  with  re- 
curved beaks,  and  crenulated  margin ;  and  the  only  alteration  in  the 
specific  character  to  the  last  edition  of  that  work,  by  Gmelin,  is,  that 
the  beaks  and  margins  are  not  mentioned.     It  hence  is  evident  that 
Dr.  Pultney  is  mistaken  in  the  Linnaean  lactea,  when  he  says  it  is 
strongly  striated  in  a  reticulated  manner ;  for  Linnaeus  exactly  de- 
scribes  it  as  having  the  reticulating   striae   obsolete ;  and  notwith- 
standing that  the  longitudinal   striae   in  the  shell  found  on  our  coast 
are  rather  prominent  in  some  specimens,  they  far  more  frequently 
appear  altogether  obsolete,  and  are  decussated  by  fine  transverse  striae, 
precisely  as    Linnaeus   mentions.      There   is   another   circumstance 
equally  remarkable,  Linnaeus  exactly  tells  us  his  lactea  is  the  size  of 
a  horse-bean,  and  Dr.  Pultney,  after  observing  that  his  British  shell 
crinita  "  are  commonly  not  much  larger  than  a  horse-bean,"  adds, 
that  the  lactea  of  Linnaeus  is  "  much  larger." 

That  there  may  have  been  some  erroneous  references  among 
aiithors  to  the  two  shells  figured  by  Lister,  No.  67  and  69,  of  which. 
we  are  not  aware,  is  not  impossible,  but  Gmelin  refers  to  List. 
Conch.  69.  A.  T.  Guernsey,  for  the  Linnaean  lactea,  and  that 
shell  clearly  corresponds  both  with  our  specimen,  and  the  shell 
described  by  Linnaeus,  pectunculus  exiguus  albus  admodum  tenuiter 
striatis.     List. — Petvver  is  equally  satisfactory,    Mytilus   Gamseiae 

G  4 


PLATE    CXXXV. 

albus,  parvus  tenuitcr  cancellata.  Da  Costa  is  not  so  very  clear,  nor 
is  his  figure  expressive,  because  it  represents  the  transverse  ridges  too 
prominent.  Chemnitz  gives  a  larger  specimen  of  it  than  any  we 
have  seen ;    and  notwithstanding    his  references   to  Da  Costa  and 

others,  may  not  be  of  the  same  species. The  shell  figured  by 

Lister,  No.  67,  which  seems  to  have  occasioned  the  confusion  before 
alluded  to,  it  should  be  observed,  is  described  by  Gmelin,  in  these 
words :  testa  subrhomboidea  decussatim  striata  alba  :  natibus  approxi- 
mates, vulva  cordata,  Area  reticulata. 

Hence  it  is  presumed  the  shell  found  on  our  coast  ought  still 
to  be  considered  as  the  Area  lactea  of  Linnaeus,  and  that  the  shell 
which  is  strongly  striated  in  a  reticulated  manner,  and  so  much 
larger  ;  and  has  been  hitherto  regarded  by  some  as  that  species, 
was  never  described,  or  even  noticed  by  Linnaeus.  Nothing 
can  be  more  evident  than  that  this  is  the  opinion  of  his  editor 
Gmelin,  both  from  his  references  to  the  figures  of  lactea,  and  by  his 
giving  a  new  name  and  character  to  that  very  shell  in  Lister  which 
has  been  mistaken  for  it,  and  which  he  conceived  Linnaeus  had 
omitted. 

This  kind  is  generally  considered  as  an  inhabitant  of  Dorsetshire, 
Devonshire,  and  Cornwall. 


lib 


PLATE     CXXXVI. 

HELIX    ARBUSTORUM. 

SINGLE-STREAK  SNAIL. 
GENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Aperture  of  the  mouth  contracted  and  lunulated. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Shell  umbilicated,  convex,  aperture  somewhat  orbicular,  lip  reflected, 
with  a  single  dark  spiral  band. 

Helix  ArbusTorum:  testa  umbilicata  convexa  acuminata,  aper- 

tura  suborbiculari  bimarginata  :  antice  elongata, 
Linn.Sj/st.  Nat.  p.  1245.  No.  680. 

Cochlea  testa  utrinque  convexa  subcinerea  :  fascia  solitaria  grisea, 

labro  reflexo.  Linn.  Fn.  Suec.  1 .  p.  370,  No. 
1295.    II  No.  2184. 

Cochlea  maculata,  unica  fascia  pulla,  angustioreque,  per  medium  an- 
fractus,  insignita.  List.  H.  An.  Angl.  p.  119. 
tit.  4.  tab.  2.  jig.  4. 

Cochlea  subflava  maculata  atque  unica  fascia  castanei  colons  per  me- 
dium anfractus,  insignita.  Phil.  Trans.  No. 
105.  Jig.  4. 


PLATE    CXXXVI. 

Cochlea  subumbillcata,  maculata,  unica  fascia  angusta,  per  medium 
anfractus  insignita.  Unifasciata,  single  streak, 
Da  Costa.  Brit.  Conch,  p.  15.  sp.  40. 

Helis  arbustorum.  Shrub.  Penn.  Brit.  Zool.  No.  130.  tab.  85. 
fig.  130. 


Like  the  two  species  of  Helices,  nemoralis  and  hortensis,  this  shell 
varies  exceedingly  in  its  colours  and  markings  in  different  shells ;  but 
the  single  narrow  spiral  band  very  uniformly  distinguishes  it  from  any 
other.  According  to  Lister  and  Petiver,  it  is  found  in  shady  hedges, 
and  is  frequent  in  rushy,  moist,  or  marshy  meadows.  Da- Costa 
says,  it  is  also  found  in  coppices  and  shrubberies ;  but,  from  his  own 
observations,  it  is  not  a  common  kind  :  we  have  seen  it  in  woods, 
though  not  often. 

It  may  deserve  remark,  that  this  shell  is  generally  found  empty. 
Muller  accounts  for  this,  by  acquainting  us,  that  the  animal  is  the 
prey  of  young  Newts.  Sometimes  when  the  animal  is  living,  the 
shell  is  of  a  light  chesnut  colour,  finely  marbled,  mottled,  or  other- 
wise variegated,  with  a  deep  chocolate  coloured  brown. 


137 


PLATE    CXXXVIL 

OSTREA  JACOB^A. 

PILGRIM   OTSTER,    OR    SCALLOP. 

■ 

GENERIC   CHARACTER. 

Animal  a  Tethys.  Shell  bivalve,  with  the  valves  mostly  unequal 
and  slightly  eared.  Hinge  without  teeth,  but  furnished  with  an  ovate 
hollow,  and  in  general  lateral  transverse  furrows. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shells  with  fourteen  angular  and  longitudinally  striated  rays. 

Ostrea  JacobtEA  :  testae  radiis  quatuordecim  angulatis  longitudi- 
naliter  striatis.  Linn. — Gmel.  Syst.  Nat.  p. 
3316.  sp.  2. 

Pecten  magnus    inasquivalvis  operculo  fubrufo,    fornix  vero    albus 

costis  angulatis  et  canaliculars.  Jacob<eus.  Da 
Costa  Brit.  Conch,  p.  143.  sp.  2. 

P.  JacoB^eus  Lesser.     Penn.Brit,  Zool.  No.  62.  tab.  60.  fig.  62. 


This  large  and  handsome  kind  of  Scallop  is  rare  on  the  English 
coasts :  in  the  Mediterranean  it  is  more  frequent,  and  from  that 


PLATE    CXXXVII. 

that  circumstance,  is  supposed  to  be  the  same  species  as  was  formerly 
worn  by  pilgrims,  who  visited  the  holy-land.  Da  Costa  received  it 
from  Scarborough  in  Yorkshire,  and  also  from  the  coasts  of  Cornwall 
and  Dorsetshire.  Dr.  Pultney  remarks,  that  it  is  rare  on  the  Dorset- 
shire coast,  but  has  been  fished  up  at  Weymouth  and  at  Poole. 

The  upper  valve  is  of  a  reddish  brown,  flat,  and  rather  depressed 
at  the  beak  :  the  depression  is  generally  white,  and  mottled,  or  other- 
wise marked  with  brown,  or  dusky  red  ;  and  often  with  prettily  dis- 
posed marks,  resembling  the  heads  of  arrows.  The  under  valve  is 
usually  white,  or  faintly  tinged  with  brown,  and  has  the  rays  re- 
markably prominent  and  angular ;  a  character  by  which  it  may  be 
easily  distinguished  from  the  Common  Scallop,  Ostrea  maxima, 
which  greatly  resembles  it,  but  in  which  the  rays  are  rounded. 


lOfj 


% 


$ 


$ 


PLATE    CXXXVIII. 

VOLUTA   TRIPLICATA. 

THREE  PLAITED  VOLUTE. 
QENERIC    CHARACTER. 

Animal  Limax.     Shell  spiral,  narrow,  without  a  beak :  columella  or 

pillar,  twisted  or  plaited. 

t 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Shell  ovate,  smooth  and  brown  :  spire  rather  pointed  :  whorls  six : 

pillar  with  three  plaits. 

Voluta  triplicata  :  testa  ovata  laevi  brunnea,  spira  acutiuscula  : 
anfractibus  sex,  columella  triplicata. 

Turbo  sex  anfractibus  apertura  ovali  bidentata.     Walker.  Test.  min. 

rar.  jig.  50  ? 


This  curious  little  Volute  has  not  we  believe  been  either  figured 
or  described  by  any  Author.  In  its  general  appearance  it  approaches 
pretty  nearly  to  the  shell  figured  by  Walker,  as  above  quoted ;  but 
if  the  same,  that  writer  has  certainly  described  it  with  no  very  great 
degree  of  accuracy  ;  for  he  speaks  only  of  two  plaits,  or  teeth  in  the 


PLATE    CXXXVIII. 

aperture,  and  calls  it  the  double-toothed  Turbo ;  although  from  its 
plaited  pillar,  it  is  evidently  a  Volute  :  and  the  third  plait,  which  with 
the  two  others,  characterize  the  species,  is  obviously  too  large  to  have 
been  overlooked.  Da  Costa,  we  are  persuaded,  thought  they  were 
both  the  same,  for  in  a  MS.  note  attached  to  this  shell  in  his  collec- 
tion, he  says,  "  This  shell  is  figured  by  Walker,"  and  certainly  no 
figure  in  the  volume  of  that  Author  corresponds  with  it,  except  that 
to  which  we  refer  above. 

Walker  speaks  of  his  shell  as  being  very  common  on  the  roots  of 
rushes,  in  marshes,  near  Faversham :  The  habitat  of  our  shell  we 
have  not  been  able  to  ascertain,  having  never  found  it  in  a  living 
state. 


PLATE     CXXXIX. 


SABELLA  ALVEOLATA. 


i 

HONEY-COMB  SABELLA,   OR  SAND  SHELL, 


GENERIC    CHARACTER^ 

Animal  a  Nereis,  with  a  ringent  mouth,  and  two  thicket  tentaculas 
behind  the  head.  Shell  tubular,  and  composed  chiefly  of  sand,  agglu- 
tinated to  a  membranaceous  tube. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Composite,  consisting  of  numerous  parallel  tubes,  with  somewhat 

funnel-shaped  aperture. 

Sabella  alveolata  :  testa  composita  concamerationibus  nume- 

rosis :  aperturis  sub-infundibuliformibus. 
Sabella  alveolata  :  testa  composita  concamerationibus  nume- 

rosis  poro  communicantibus.    Gmel.  Linn.  Sj/st. 

Nat.  T.  1.  p.  6.  p.  3749.  Sp.  3. 
Sabella  alveolata,  Honey-comb.    Penn.  Brit.  Zool.  Vol.  4. 

p.  147.  sp.  162. — Ellis  Coral,  p.  90.  t.  36. 


PLATE     CXXXIX. 

"We  have  constantly  observed  this  kind  of  Sabella  to  be  an  inha- 
bitant only  of  low  rocky  shores,  that  lie  within  reach  of  the  tide  at 
high  water  ;  and  although  it  is  composed  entirely  of  broken  shells  and 
sea  sand  ;  and  those  apparently  very  slightly  agglutinated  by  the  ani- 
mals that  form  and  inhabit  it,  in  its  native  element  it  acquires  a  con- 
siderable comparative  degree  of  tenacity  from  the  saline  particles  with 
which  it  is  impregnated,  and  is  capable  of  resisting  the  reiterated 
dashing  of  the  waves  without  material  injury. 

In  the  more  sheltered  crevices  of  the  rocks,  where  the  animal  has 
ample  scope  to  expand  its  sandy  dwelling  secure  from  mutilation,  the 
upper  surface  of  a  mass  of  these  shells  has  a  very  elegant  appearance  ; 
the  whole  being  beautifully  foliated  with  the  single  or  bipartite  funnnel- 
shaped  lip,  which  each  animal  forms  at  the  opening  of  his  cell.  This 
appearance  is  represented  in  the  plate  subjoined,  and  is  a  circumstance 
the  moredeserving  attention,  because  ithas  entirely  escaped  the  notice  of 
Mr.  Pennant,  and  perhaps  of  every  other  Naturalist,  except  Mr.  Ellis  ; 
who  in  his  History  of  Corals,  figures  it  with  a  foliated  surface,  under 
the  title  of  Tubularia  arenosa  anglica,  from  a  specimen  brought  from 
Dieppe.  The  latter  does  not  however  agree  precisely  in  figure  with 
any  that  have  occurred  to  our  notice.  Mr.  Pennant  evidently  represents 
a  poor  mutilated  fragment,  in  which  the  openings  of  the  cells  are 
shewn  like  so  many  rounded  perforations,  in  a  somewhat  uneven  sur- 
face, and  is  just  as  it  appears  in  masses  on  the  sea-beach,  that  have 
been  trodden  under-foot ;  or  pieces  that  have  been  much  worn,  ancj 
thrown  loose  upon  the  shore. 

These  shells  are  three  or  four  inches  in  length,  and  where  they  are 
found  are  generally  abundant,  but  they  seem  to  be  very  local.  Mr. 
Pennant  says  it  is  found  on  the  Western  coasts  of  Anglesea,  near  Cric- 


PLATE    CXXXIX. 

ceth  in  Caernarvonshire,  and  near  Yarmouth.  We  have  seen  it  on 
other  parts  of  the  sea  coast  of  North  Wales,  and  in  equal  plenty 
on  those  of  South  Wales  likewise.  On  the  coast  of  Dorsetshire, 
according  to  Dr.  Pultney,  fragments  are  found  very  frequently,  but 
none  very  perfect.  In  the  History  of  that  County  the  following  ac- 
count is  given  of  it. — "  Gregarious  Sabella.  This  is  composed 
of  a  mass  of  fine  sand,  and  particles  of  broken  and  finely  comminuted 
shells,  aggregated  by  vermiform  animals  of  the  Nereis  genus,  each 
lodged  in  its  separate  tube  close  to,  but  not  interfering  with  each 
other.  All  the  tubes  end  in  orifices  on  the  upper  or  the  same  surface. 
I  but  once  saw  a  mass  of  this  kind,  about  the  size  of  a  large  apple,  on 
the  beach,  a  mile  east  of  Weymouth  ;  but  I  suspect  it  is  not  very  un- 
common, as  fragments  are  very  frequent." 


TOL.  iv.  H 


to 


PLATE     CXL. 

MACTRA  HIANS. 

GAPING,    OR    OBLONG    MACTRA, 
GENERIC   CHARACTER. 

Animal  a  Tefhys.  Shell  bivalve:  valves  equal;  sides  unequal; 
middle  tooth  of  the  hinge  complicated,  with  a  small  hollow  :  lateral 
teeth  remote  and  inserted  into  each  other. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER. 

Shell  oblong,    rather  arcuated,  coarse,  gaping  anteriorly,    and  the 

hinge  placed  very  far  back. 

Mactra  hians  :  testa  oblonga  sub-arcuata  rudi  anticc  hiante,  car- 
dine  subterminali. 
Mactra  hians.     Soland.  Mus.  Port. 


Da  Costa  and  some  other  Conchologists  have  very  erroneously 
been  led  to  conclude,  that  this,  and  ivlactra  lurraria,  are  the  same 
species,  although  they  differ  in  almost  every  particular.  The  pre- 
sent shell  is  much  wider  in  proportion  to  the  length  than  M.  lutraria. ; 
and  of  a  more  incurvated  shape  :  it  is  also  a  thicker  and  coarser 
shell ,  and  has  the  hinge  placed  much  further  back  than  in  the  other 
species.'  Dr.  Solandcr,  who  described  it  in  the  catalogue  of  the 
Portland  Museum,  gave  i&  the  specific  name  of  hians,  from  its  re- 

h  2 


PLATE    CXL. 

markable  gaping  at   the  anterior  end,  and  a  name  so  applicable  we 
thought  it  best  to  retain. 

The  cicatrix  of  the  animal,  in  this  kind,  is  different  from  that  of 
M.  lutraria,  a  circumstance  that  has  not  escaped  the  observation  of 
Dr.,Pultney.  This  author  tells  us,  the  Mactra  hians  is  thrown  up 
in  considerable  quantities  on  all  the  smooth  beaches  he  has  seen  on 
the  coast  of  Dorsetshire,  particularly  on  the  North  shore  at  Poole, 
opposite  Branksea  isle  ;  and  that  he  has  also  seen  it  on  the  beaches  at 
Studland,  Swanage,  and  Weymouth.  We  have  observed  it,  but 
not  in  abundance,  on  other  sea-coasts. 


!'}■: 


PLATE    CXLI. 

MYTILUS  RUGOSUS, 

RUGGED  MUSCLE, 
GENERIC    CHARACTER, 

The  hinge  toothless,  and  consists  of  a  longitudinal  furrow. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

I 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  rhombic  oval,  rugged,  obtuse  at  the  ends  and  antiquated. 

Mytilus  rugosus  :  testa  rhomboideo-ovali  rugosa  obmsa  antiquata. 

Linn.  Si/st.  Nat.  p.  1156-  No.  249. 
Pholas  noster,  sive  concha  intra  lapidem  quendam  cretaceum  degens. 

List.  II.  An..  Angl.  p.  1T22.  tit.  21.  tab.  4. 

Jig.  21. 
Mytilus  parvus  rhomboidea-ovalis,  subalbescens,  rugosus.     Rugosus, 

Rugged,  Da  Costa  Brit.  Conch,  p.  223.  sp.  52. 


The  Mytilus  rugosus  is  rather  a  rare  species  on  our  coasts.  Lister 
notes  it  from  Hartlepool  in  Durham,  and  Da  Costa  says  on  the  coast 
of  Yorkshire,  about  Scarborough,  Whitby,  &c.  It  is  found  in  incre- 
dible abundance,  niched  or  burrowed,  in  the  rocks  of  lime-stone,  &c. 


h  3 


PLATE    CXLI. 

In  habit  and  manners  of  life  this  species  greatly  resembles  the  Pho- 
lades,  each  forming  for  itself  a  separate  apartment  within  the  hard 
clay,  or  solid  stone  :  this  it  pierces  when  young,  and  afterwards  con- 
tinues to  enlarge  the  cell  as  it  increases  in  bulk,  without  widening  the 
aperture ;  so  that  when  full  grown,  the  shell  cannot  easily  be  taken 
whole  out  of  the  cell,  without  breaking  the  stone  in  which  it  is 
contained. 

This  shell  may  perhaps  be  arranged  with  equal  propriety  with  the 
My<e  as  the  Mytili,  notwithstanding  that  it  is  admitted  among  the 
latter  by  most  collectors. 


7+2 


PLATE     CXLIL 

MYA    GLYCYMERIS. 


LARGE    MY  A. 


GENERIC     CHARACTER. 


Animal  Ascidia.  Shell  bivalve,  gaping  in  general  at  one  extremity  : 
hinge  with  a  thick  patulous  tooth  ;  seldom  more  than  one,  and  that 
not  inserted  into  the  opposite  valve. 


SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 


Shell  gaping  at  both  ends :  very  thick,  lamellous  oblong-oval,  with 
transverse  rugose  striae  :  first  tooth  of  the  hinge  very  thick. 

My  A  Glycymeris  :  testa  utrinque  hiante  crassissima  lamellata  ob- 

longo  ovata  transverse  striato  rugosa,  cardinis 
dente  primario  crassissimo,  Gmel.  Sj/st.  Nat. 
p.  3222.  sp.  17. 

Mya  Glycymeris  :  testa  sub-ovata  oblonga,  ponderosa,  ventricosa, 

utrinque  hians,  antice  et  postice  quasi  oblique 
truncata,  dente  cardinali  crassissimo.  Chtmn. 
T.  6.  p.  33. 

Telline  beante,  Fa-cart  D'Herbigny.  Did.  T.  3.  p.  358. 

List.  n.  Conch.  6.  t.  Z.f.  25.     Bom.  t.  \.f.  8. 
H  4 


PLATE    CXLII. 

r 

A  species  of  Mya  admitted  with  some  doubt  as  a  British  shell :  it 
is  a  kind  acknowledged  however  as  such,  by  collectors  of  English 
Natural  History  in  general ;  and  is  said  to  have  been  undoubtedly 
fished  up  in  the  deep  waters  between  the  Dogger-Bank  and  the 
eastern  coast  of  England.  ' 

The  Mya  Glycymeris  is  the  largest  of  its  genus,  and  is  an  inha- 
bitant of  most  parts  of  the  European  sea.  In  the  Mediterranean, 
and  on  the  northern  coasts  of  Spain,  it  is  not  uncommon :  on  the 
coast  of  France  it  is  also  found  sometimes. 


143 


/ 


f 


PLATE     CXLIII. 


BULLA    PATULA. 


PATULOUS    BULLA. 


GENERIC    CHARACTER. 


Animal  Limax.     Shell  rather  convoluted  at  one  end,  suboval :  aper- 
ture oblong. 

SPECIFIC    CHARACTER 

AND 

SYNONYMS. 

Shell  ovate,  smooth,  and  somewhat  beaked  at  both  ends  ;  that  at  the 
base  produced  and  sub-umbilicated  :  lip  entire. 

Bulla  patula  :  testa  ovatalaevi  sub-birostri  :  basi  production  sub- 

umbilicata,  labro  integro. 
Bulla  patula.     Open.     B.  with  one  one  end  much  produced  and 

fuciform.     The  aperture  very  patulous.     Penn. 

Brit.  Zool.  V.  4.  p.  111.  sp.  85. 


Pennant  seems  to  be  the  only  author  who  has  noticed  this  species. 
Da  Costa  imagined,  from  the  description  given  by  that  author, 
that  it  was  of  the  same  kind  as  that  which  he  inserted  in  his  British 


PLATE    CXLIIL 

Conchology,  under  the  name  of  Bulla,  the  Bubble  (Aperta,  Linn.) 
and  refers  to  the  figure  in  the  work  of  Pennant  accordingly  ;  but 
in  this  instance  he  was  much  mistaken,  for  the  two  shells  are  per- 
fectly distinct ;  and  it  appears  certain,  that  the  shell  described  by  Da 
Costa  was  as  much  unknown  to  Pennant,  as  that  of  Pennant  was  to 
Da  Costa.  The  shell  of  the  latter  is  figured  in  Plate  120  of  this 
work,  and  the  true  Bulla  patula  of  the  other  is  figured  in  the  Plate 
annexed. 

This  we  apprehend  to  be  one  of  the  rarest  of  the  British  shells 
hitherto  discovered  ;  Pennant  notes  it  from  Weymouth,  and  refers 
for  his  specimen  to  the  Portland  Cabinet :  our  shell  is  from  Wey- 
mouth likewise. 


IM 


PLATE    CXLIV. 


NERITA  NITIDA. 


GLOSST  NERIT. 


GENERIC    CHARACTER. 


Animal  Limax.  Shell  univalve,  spiral,  gibbous,  and  rather  flat 
beneath  :  aperture  semi-orbicular,  or  semi-lunar  :  pillar  lip  transverse 
truncated  and  flattish. 

SPECIFIC  CHARACTER. 

Shell  smooth,  white,  and   glossy  :    spire  rather   pointed :  umbilicus 

half  closed. 

Nerita  Nitida  testa  Isevi  nivea  nitida :  spira  sub-mucronata  um- 
bilico  semi-clauso. 


Among  the  reserved  shells  intended  by  Da  Costa  for  a  second  edi- 
tion of  his  Conchology,  we  find  two  specimens  of  this  species  of 
Nerita,  with  a  MS.  memorandum,  importing  that  he  had  received 
one  of  them  from  Mr.  Church,  and  that  the  other  was  in  his  posses- 
sion before.  On  this  vague  authority,  we  did  not  think  it  incumbent 
to  insert  the  shell  in  the  present  Work,  especially  since  its  habitat  was 


PLATE    CXLIV. 

not  mentioned  ;  but  the  same  kind  was  discovered,  in  the  course  of 
last  summer,  upon  the  coast  of  Scotland,  near  Caithness,  by  A. 
Macleay,  Esq.  and  we  can  no  longer  hesitate  to  insert  it  as  an  un- 
doubted British  species. 

In  the  annexed  plate  it  is  represented  of  the  natural  size.  It  is  a 
remarkable  little  shell,  and  is  not  to  the  best  of  our  knowledge,  men- 
tioned in  the  work  of  any  author. 


> 


INDEX 


VOL.  IV. 


LINNiEAN  ARRANGEMENT. 


*  MULTIVALVIA; 


Plate.      Fig. 

PhOLAS  dactylus,  (Da  Costa)  -  -  -         118 

.  Candida  - 


-  132 

striata  -  -  -  117 


BIVALVIA.   CONCH^E. 

Mya  ovata              -  122 

— —  glycymeris         -  -                  -                -                           142 

Solen  marginatus         -  -                  -                            no 

antiquatus         -  -                -                -                -          114 

Tellina  inaequistriata  -                                                                 123 

Cardium  edule           -  124         1 

rusticum  ?  -                                                               124        z 

Mactra  glauca         -  -                  -                  -                  -125 

— — —  hians             -  -                                            140 


subtruncata  -  I26 


Venus  cancellata 


"5 


— —    undata  -  -  121 


borealis 


130 


Chama  cor  -  -                -                -  134 

Area  lactea  -  -                  -                  -               .   -  135 

Ostrsa  Jacobaea  -  ...  j^j 

•     lineata  -  -                -                 -                -  116 


INDEX. 

Plate.       Fig. 
Mytilus  edulis  _____        12g 

ungulatus  -  -  _  -         128        a 

— — —  anatinus         -  -  -  -  -         113 

■  ■■  rugosus      -  -  -  -  141 


UNIVALVIA. 

Bulla  aperta              -                                                    .                  -  120         r 

— —  cylindrica        _____  120         a 

1          patula              --__—.  143 

Voluta  triplicata        -  138 

Murex  carinatus     _____  109 
antiquus          -              -                  _                 -                   -119 

Trochus  papillosus     -              -                  -                  -                -  127 
■-     —  terrestris        -              -                 _.                  _                   -111 

Turbo  dupiicatus           -           _                  -                  _  112 

Helix  hortensis  (Aspersa  Gmcl?)               -  131 

— —  arbustorum      -                  -                 -                _                 -  136 

Ncrita  nitida            _____  ,44, 

Patella  albida             _  _2o 

Sabella  alveohta        -  135 

*  ■  tubiformis    _               -                -               _                -  *33 


INDEX    TO    VOL.   IV. 


ACCORDING     TO 


HISTORIA    NATURALIS    TESTACEORUM 
BRITANNIA   of  DA  COSTA. 


PART  I. 

UNIVALVA  NON  TURBINATA. 

GENUS  1.      PATELLA.      LIMPET,    FL1THER,    OR  PAP  SHELL, 

Plate.      Fig. 

Patella  aibida  -  «? 


PART  II. 

UNIVALVIA  INVOLUTA. 
GENUS   5.      BULLA.       DIPPER. 


Bulla  aperta  (Bulla  Da  Costa)  -  -  -        120        i 

— -  cylindrica  (Penn.)         -  -  -  -         120         a 

"-— -  patula  (Penn:)  -  -  -  -        143 


I     N    D    E    X. 


PART    III. 


UNIVALVIA  TURBINATA. 


GENUS    7.       TROCHUS.       THE    TOP. 
TERRESTRES.     LAND. 


Trochus  terrestrls 


Plate. 
in 


Fig. 


Trochus  papillosas 


*  MARINE.     SEA. 


127 


GENUS    10.       COCHLEA    SNAILS. 


*  TERRESTRES.     LAND. 


Cochlea  vulgaris 
— — —  unfaciata 


13! 

136 


GENUS   12.       STROMBIFORMIS.      NEEDLE    SNAIL. 


*  MARINE.     SEA. 


Strombiformis  bicarinatus 


112 


ORDER   2. 


BIVALVES. 


GENUS  1.       PECTEN    ESCALLOP. 


Pecten  Jacobaeus 
»    1  lineatus 


*37 


INDEX. 


GENUS    5.       ARCA,    ARKS,    OR    BOATS. 


*  MARINE.     SEA. 


Area  lactea  (Da  Costa) 


Plate.        Fig. 
135 


GENUS   6.       CARDIUM.      HEART  COCKLE. 


*  MARINE.     SEA. 


Cardium  vulgarc 
■'■■  ■    rusticum  ? 


124. 
124. 


1 
3 


GENUS    11.       MYTILUS    MUSCLE. 


Mytilus  Anatinus 


*  FLUyiATILES.     RIVER. 


113 


*  MARINE  SEA. 


Mytilus  vulgaris 

■    ungulatus 
'  rugosus     - 


123 

128 
141 


i 


PART   III. 


GENUS    13.       CHAMA    GAPERS. 


*  MARINE.     SEA. 


Chama  magna  (hians.     Solander) 
vol.  IV. 


140 


INDEX. 


GENUS  14-.       SOLEN.       SHEATH  OR  RAZOR  SHELL. 


Solen  marginatus 
■'         Chama-Solen 


Plate.        Fig. 
no 
114 


PART    IV. 


MULTI  VALVES. 


GENUS    16.       PHOLAS    PIDDOCKS. 


Pholas  dactylus 
■  11        Candida 
■      1  'I  striata 


11S 

132 
117 


ALPHABETICAL  INDEX  TO  VOL.  IV. 


Plate.      Fig 

AlBIDA  Patella        -  -                -  -129 

alveolata,  Sabella         -  -                -                  -  -         *39 

anatinus,  Mytilus       -  -  -          JI3 

antiquatus,  Solen          -  -                -  -         114 

antiquus,  Murex  •                          1*9 

aperta,  Bulla              -  -                  -                  -  -         izo        » 

arbustorum,  Helix      -  -                 -  -136 

borealis,  Venus         .  -                 -                -                         130 

cancellata,  Venus     «  -                 -                  -  -115 

Candida,  Pholas       -  -                  -                -  -         132 

carinatus,  Murex        -  -                           109 

cor,  Chama             -  -                  -                -                            134 
cylindrica,  Bulla       -                                                                                 120        a 

dactylus,  Pholas         -  -                  -                  -  -118 

duplicatus,  Turbo      -  -                -                 -  -112 

edule,  Cardium          -  -                                            124         * 

edulis,  Mytilus          -  -                                             128         1 

glauca,  Mactra          -  -                  -                -  -125 

glycymeris,  Mya      -  -                -                  -                            142 

hians,  Mactra         -  140 

hortensis,  Helix         -  -                 -                   -  -131 

inaequistriata,  Tellina  *                                                              123 

Jacobsea,  Ostrea         -  -                -                -                          137 

lactea,  Area                 -  -                -                -  -135 

lineata,  Ostrea          -  -                -                  -  -116 

marginatus,  Solen       -  -                  -  -         no 

nitida,  Nerita              -  -                -                 -                          144 

ovata,  Mya  -----         122 

papillosus,  Trochus  -                                                               127 

patula,  Bulla             -  -                -                -                          *43 


INDEX. 

Plate.      Fig. 

rugosus,  Mytilui         -  -  _  .  .         j,, 

rustlcum,  Cardium  -  -  1%/>         % 

striata,  Pholas  -  -  .  .  -117 

subtruncata,  Mactra  -  .  .  -126 

terrestris,  Trochus  -  .  _  -         111 

triplicata,  Voluta  -  .  _  -  138 

tubiformis,  Sabella  .  -  •  -        J33 

undata,  Venus  -  -  -  -  -        121 

ungulatus,  Mytilus  -  -  -  12S        t 


END    OF    VOL.    IV, 


Printed  by  Bye  and  Law,  St.  John's  Square,  Clerlcenwell. 


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