Nayabs. | 
Shell compressed, considerably elongated transversely, thin ; 
anterior side very short; posterior side very long, and produced 
into a somewhat lengthened, blunted beak; hinge line arcuated, 
and ascending, its greatest altitude being nearly central; ante- 
rior side rather narrow, and rounded; posterior side descending 
in a wayed line; basal line nearly parallel, and undulating ; 
umbones convex; outside rather smooth, and covered with a 
blackish-brown epidermis. 
Said to be found in ponds at Liverpool, but I have never 
met with one from that locality. 
An extremely thin and lengthened variety, which is covered 
with a reddish-brown epidermis, and rather rough on the sur- 
face. It inhabits Loch Kettrine, Perthshire. Our figure is 
taken from a specimen procured in that locality. 
Variety 12. Conrorra, pl. XXX, f. 7, 8. 
Shell of moderate thickness; hinge line quite parallel; the 
ligament hardly protruding beyond the hinge line; umbones 
very flat; anterior side very short, narrow, and a little point- 
ed; posterior side very broad, subrostrated, with a remarkable 
flexure, caused by a strong rib-like process, emanating in both 
valves from the umbones, and thickening towards the margin; 
the basal line prominently arcuated; shell considerably inflated, 
one valve much more convex than the other. 
This remarkable variety was found by Thomas Glover, Esq., 
of Smedley Hill, inhabiting ditches, in a flat meadow, not far 
from the School House, at Repton, near Burton-upon-Trent. 
Upwards of twenty specimens were obtained by him. Sir 
Oswald Mosley kindly undertook to procure specimens of this 
desirable shell; but on visiting the spot, found the locality com- 
pletely destroyed, in consequence of a new bridge having lately 
been built across the Trent; and although the ditch in which 
they were found communicated with the river, yet no traces of 
the shell could be found. 
Genus 2.—Unio.—Bruguiére. 
Shell transverse, equivalve, inequilateral, free, sometimes sub- 
cordate, or suborbicular; pearlaceous within; generally covered 
with a dark olivaceous epidermis, which is usually decorticated 
on the umbones; hinge provided with a short, irregular, simple, 
or a double compound tooth, which is almost always striated ; 
with two elongated, compressed, lateral teeth, the front one 
produced, sometimes obsolete; two muscular impressions in 
each valve, the superior one compound, or composed of seyeral 
divisions ; ligament external. 
1. Unio pictorum, pl. XXXI, f. 7, 8, 9, 10, 11. 
Unio pictorum, First Ed., pl. 26, f.4; Lamarck, An. San. 
Vert., VI, p. 77; Ency. Meth., pl. 248, f. 4; Pfeiffer, I, p- 115, 
pl. 5, £9, 10; Drapernaud, Moll., pl. 11, f. 4; Rossmassler, 
I, pl. 3, f. 71, a,b; Ib., III, p. 23, pl. 13, f. 197; Ib. IX and 
X, p- 10, pl. 45, f. 587 to 590; Unio rostratus, Pfeiffer, I, p. 
114, pl. 5, f.8; Mya pictorwm, Sturm, Fauna, VI, p- 2, f. a; 
Schroeter, Flussconch., pl. 4, f.6; Wood, Conch., p. 104, pl. 
19, f. 3, 4; Donovan, Brit. Sh., III, pl. 89; Afya ovalis, Mon- 
tagu, Test. Brit. p. 34; M/ysca pictorum, Turton, Man., p. 20, 
pl. 2, f. 11; Gray’s Turton, p. 295, pl. 2, f. 11, badly figured. 
Shell thin, transversely oblong-oyal, ventricose; umbones a 
little produced, and placed near to the anterior side, which is 
short, and rounded; posterior side elongated, and somewhat 
x 
MOLLUSCA. 81 
pointed; hinge line slightly bent; basal line nearly parallel, and 
a little hollowed in the centre; hinge furnished with a strong, 
double, compressed, elevated, elongated, crested, crenated, car- 
dinal tooth in the left valve, with a perpendicularly papillose, 
striated cleft on the side of its posterior portion, on which the 
tooth of the opposite valve rests, which locks into a space aboye 
the shorter cardinal tooth in the opposite valve; lateral teeth in 
both valves long, narrow, and sunk at the umbones,—from 
whence they take their rise,—becoming more elevated and 
acute as they diverge, and extend the same length as the liga- 
ment; inside highly pearlaceous; varying in different specimens 
from bluish-white to a rich salmon-colour, with faint, nearly 
obsolete radiations, extending from the umbones to the mar- 
gins; pallial impressions well marked; anterior muscular im- 
pressions very deep; posterior ones distinctly defined; outside 
covered with a smooth, shining, yellowish-green epidermis, but 
varying in colour from different localities; with very indistinct, 
nearly obsolete, divergent grooves, radiating from the umbones 
to the margins; and with transverse, concentric, slight furrows, 
and very irregular, transverse strie, most conspicuous towards 
the sides. 
Fig. 11, pl. XXXI, is an external view of the teeth of the 
hinge. 
Found in the river Ouse, at York; the Aire, near Gargrew; 
the Severn, near Shrewsbury; in the Aire, near Skipton; the 
Avon, near Leamington, Warwickshire; and several other slow 
running rivers and lakes in Britain. 
Variety 1, pl. XXXI, f. 7 and 10. 
Rossmassler, III, p. 23, pl. 13, f. 196; Ib., I, p. 118, pl. 3, 
fe lai eros 
The length somewhat more than two-fifths of its breadth ; 
thickness a third more than its length. This is the ordinary 
form of the species. 
Found in the Ouse, at York; the Severn, near Shrewsbury; 
the canal, near Birmingham; and Sir Oswald Mosley, Bart., 
sent me some beautiful specimens, from the lake at Rolleston, 
with the insides of a rich nacred, pale salmon-colour. In this 
locality they grow to a very large size, measuring an inch 
and three-quarters in length, and upwards of four inches in 
breadth. 
Fariety 2, pl. XXXI, f. 8. 
Rossmassler, I, p. 117, pl. 3, f. 70, a, Unio tumidius. 
The posterior side more pointed, that side gradually dimi- 
nishing both above and below, from the umbones. Length 
five-tenths of its breadth; thickness half its length; cardinal 
and lateral teeth longer and more prominent than in the first 
variety. 
Inhabits the Aire, near Gargrew; and the river Brothay, 
which empties itself into Windermere, near Ambleside. 
Variety 3, pl. XXXI, f. 9. 
Considerably longer than the former two varieties, being 
nearly a third, in proportion to its breadth; the umbones more 
central and prominent ; and somewhat more inflated. 
Found in the Don, at Sheffield. 
2. Unio Desnaysi, pl. XXXII, f. 1, 2, 3, 4. 
Unio Deshaysti, Rossmassler, III, p. 23, pl. 13, f. 197; Gib- 
son, MSS. 
Shell thickish, much elongated transversely; hinge line slightly 
curved; basal line nearly parallel, slightly waved in the centre, 
