Centh Class. 
CIRRHIPEDA. 
Shell sessile or elevated, on a flexible, tendinous pedicle ; multivalve; sometimes moveable, 
sometimes fixed; the inside covered hy the Mantle of the Animal. 
Tue CIRRHIPEDA are divided into 'Two Orders. Sessile Cirrhipeda, and 
Pedunculated Cirrhipeda. 
ORDER I.—_SESSILE CIRRHIPEDA*.__6 GenEra. 
THE Shells of this Order are fixed on marine bodies. 
TusicineLta.—Shell univalve, operculated, tubular, erect, a little attenuated towards 
the base, bound with annular transverse ribs, truncated at both ends, open at the 
summit, and closed at the base with a membrane. Operculum with four obtuse 
valves. 
Plate I. Fig. 12. T. balenarum. 
Coronuta.—Shell sessile, apparently indivisible, suborbicular, conoidal or blunt-conical, 
the extremities truncated, the sides very thick, the inside hollowed into radiating 
cells. Operculum composed of four obtuse valves. 
Plate I. Fig. 13. (a) C. balenaris. Upper-side. (Lepas balenaris.—Linn.) 
(b) Inside. 
Ba.Lanus.—Shell sessile, fixed, conical, summit truncated, closed at the base by an ad- 
hering testaceous lamina. Aperture subtriangular, or elliptical. Operculum inter- 
nal, quadrivalve, the valves moveable, inserted near the base of the inside of the 
shell. 
Plate I. Fig. 14. B. radiatus. 
Acasta.—Shell sessile, oval, subconical, composed of separable pieces: cone formed of 
six unequal lateral valves united together; the base a lamina or orbicular valve, 
concave on the inside, resembling a patella or littlecup. Operculum quadrivalve. 
Plate I. Fig. 15. A. Montagui. 
* Lamarck has erroneously separated this Order into Two Divisions—Operculum quadrivalve, and Oper- 
culum bivalve. Sowerby has shewn, in his Genera, that the whole are quadrivalve. 
B2 
