224 



GLOSSARY. 



Imbricated, placed like the tiles of 



a house. 

 Imperforated, not pierced w-ith a 



hole, wanting an umbilicus. 

 Inequilateral, when the anteinor 



and posterior sides make ditt'er- 



ent angles v.ith the hinge. 

 Inequivalve, where one valve is 



more convex than the other, or 



dissimilar in other respect.?, as 



iu the common oyster. 

 Inarticulate, not jointed. 

 Incumbent, one lying over the 



other. 

 Incurved, >bent invrards, crook- 

 Incurvated, $ ed. 

 Indented, unequally marked, liol- 



lowed. 

 Inflated, tumid, swollen, as if blown 



out. 

 Inflected, or inflexed, bent inwards. 

 Intercostal, placed between the 



ribs. 

 Internode, the space between one 



knot or joint and another. 

 InteiTupted, divided, separated. 

 Interstice, space between one part 



and another, a crevice. 

 Intortion, the tm-ning or twisting 



in any particular direction. 

 Involucre, a covering. 

 Involution,that part which involves 



or inwi'aps another. 

 Involute, where the exterior lip is 



turned inwards, at the margin, 



as in the Cjqn-aja. 

 IsabeUa-colom-, a brownish-yeUow 



mth a shade of brownish-red. 

 Juncture, the joining of the whorls 



in univalve shells. 



K. 



Keel, the longitudinal prominence 



in the Argonauta. 

 Knob, a protuberance, any part 



bluntly arising above the rest. 



L. 



Labra, the lips. 



Laciniate, jagged or cut into irre- 

 gular segments. 



Lacunose, having the sui-face" cov- 

 ered with pits. 



Lamellar, consisting of films or 

 plates. 



Lamellated, divided into distinct 

 plates or foliations. 



Lamina?, thin plates, laid one coat 

 above another. 



Lanceolate, oblong, and gradually 

 tai)ering like the head of a lance. 



Lateral, placed at the side, or ex- 

 tending to one side, fi-om the 

 centre. 



Latticed, ha^dng longitudinal lines 

 or fiuTOws, decussated by trans- 

 verse lines. 



Lenticulate, doubly convex, of the 

 form of a lens. 



Ligament, a solid body, softer than 

 a cartilage, but harder than a 

 membrane, which connects the 

 valves in bivalves. 



Limb, the disk of bivalve shells. 



Linear, composed of Unes, or slen-. 

 der like a line. 



Lineate, marked with hues. 



Lij), the outer edge of the aperture 

 of univalves. 



Littoral, of or belonging to the 

 shore. 



Lobated, rounded at the edges. 



Longitudinal, in the direction of 

 the length of the sheU from the 

 apex to the base. 



Lubricity, sUpperiness, smoothness 

 of surface. 



Lunated, fonned like a half moon. 



Luniform, in the shape of a cres- 

 cent. 



Lunulated, crescent-shaped. 



Ltmule, a crescent-like mark or 

 spot, situated near the anterior 

 and posterior slopes in bivalve 

 shells. 



M. 



Margin, the whole circumference 



or outline of the shtU in bivalves. 

 Marginated, having a prominent 



margin or border. 

 ^Membrane, a thin fllmy body. 

 Membranaceous, consisting of 



membranes. 

 Mottled, clouded or spotted with 



Aarious colours. 

 Mucronate, ending in a sharp rigid 



point. 

 Multilocular, many-chambered, 



consisting of several divisions. 

 Muricated, clothed with shaip 



spines. 



N. 



Nacred, pearly, perlaceous. 

 Nemoral, of or belonging to a wood, 

 Nitid, slossy. 



