BRACHIOPODA. 337 
Terminology.] 
v., vascular sinuses. 
add., adductor muscle scars. 
did., diductor muscle scars. 
adj., adjustor muscle scars. When the pedicle muscular scar is present, it appears 
in the apex of the rostral cavity, posterior to the other scars, and is indi- 
cated by transverse striz. 
Fie. 23. a, interior view of the ventral valve of Clitambonites diversa Shaler; b, dorsal view of 
Zygospira modesta (Say) Hall, from which the greater portion of the dorsal valve 
has been removed to show the calcified brachial supports. 
spond., spondylium, a plate formed by the junction of the dental plates, to the 
upper surface of which were attached the adductor, diductor, and adjustor 
muscles. This plate is also present in the Pentameride. 
m. sep., median septum supporting the spondylium. 
d.p.  deltidial plates. See deltidiuwm. 
spire, the spiral cones or calcified brachial supports. The spires may be directed 
toward the center of the dorsal valve or with their apices toward the 
lateral margins. The lamelle are usually single, but a number of genera 
have two bands in each spiral cone. The brachial supports also may be 
short or long hooks or crura to which the fleshy arms are attached, as in 
Ehynchonella, or they may form a more or less complicated “loop,” as in 
the terebratuloids. For an illustration of a loop, see the species of 
Hallina of this report. 
C.b., connecting band or loop; it is variously disposed, and of a great variety of 
forms growing out from each spiral cone, and may or may not join medi- 
ally. In Atrypa and Spirifer, the band is represented by two prongs. 
Protegulum, Beecher. The initial shell of brachiopods. It is smooth and of micro- 
scopic size, in outline semicircular or semielliptical, with a straight 
or arcuate hinge line and without a hinge area. Homologous to the 
it 
“protoconch” of Owen in cephalopods, and to the ‘“prodissoconch” of 
Jackson in lamellibranchs. 
