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On Perna quadrata, Sow. By JOHN LYCETT, Esq. 

 READ 30-TH JANUARY 1855. 



THE present notice of a fossil shell, which has already been 

 figured and described, requires some explanation. 



The Perna quadrata of the ' Mineral Conchology/ t. 490. f. 2, 

 represents a very inequivalve Perna ; but as the specimen figured 

 appears to have been somewhat imperfect, and as it was placed 

 by the artist in an unfortunate position and is seen only from 

 a single point of view, it affords a very insufficient aid to a de- 

 scription which is substantially correct as far as it refers to the 

 only specimen which appears to have been at the disposal of the 

 author. With such an illustration it will not afford surprise to 

 find that Phillips in his Geology of Yorkshire, t. 9. f. 24, repre- 

 sented a second and very different shell under the name of Perna 

 quadrata ; and as the latter work contains no descriptions of spe- 

 cies, Goldfuss was in turn also misled to figure a third Perna 

 distinct from both the others under the same name (Petrefacta, 

 t. 108 ); upon the same plate however is Perna rugosa, which is 

 identical with the quadrata of Phillips ; the latter is an equivalve, 

 squamous, thick shell, well known to collectors of British Inferior 

 Oolite fossils. There is another inducement to acquire a correct 

 knowledge of the original Perna quadrata, inasmuch as the spe- 

 cies is a very remarkable one, constituting a departure from the 

 typical forms of the Perna, and approaching to others of the 

 kindred genus Inoceramus. The diagnosis of this shell in the 

 ' Mineral Conchology ' is as follows : " Quadrilateral, one side 

 shorter than the other three ; valves gibbose, unequal, the shorter 

 side very concave, bounded by two obtuse carinae." 



The figure in the ' Mineral Conchology ' has the right or 

 flattened valve facing the spectator; the contour of the larger or 

 convex valve therefore is not seen : the shell is not placed upright 

 upon the page, the lower border forming the right-hand side of 

 the figure : even the outline is not perfect, as there seems to be a 

 portion of the lower border wanting, and thus forming an angle 

 at its anterior extremity, which would be rounded were that part 

 entire. 



The typical Perna are equivalve or subequivalve ; their fibrous 

 tests are squamous externally, and acquire great thickness with 



