308 



EDIBLE BRITISH MOLLUSCA. 



Tapes aurea found at Helford and 



Falmouth, 28. 

 Tapes aurea found in the Scilly 



Isles, 28. 

 Tapes cooked Hampshire method, 



30. 



Tapes decussata eaten in Devon- 

 shire, &c., 25. 

 Tapes decussata more local than 



Tapes pullastra, 26. 

 Tapes decussata common near Ex- 

 mouth, 26. 



Tapes decussata how to find, 26. 

 Tapes decussata called Clouvisso, 27. 

 Tapes highly prized by the 



Spaniards, 28. 

 Tapes au naturel, Almejas al 



natural, 29. 



Tapes, potage of oysters and, 30. 

 Tapes pullastra, pullet or cullyock, 



25. 

 Tapes pullastra used as bait in the 



Northern Isles, 26. 

 Tapes ragout, Almejas guisadas, 29. 

 Tapes sauce, Salsa de Almejas, 29. 

 Tapes soup, Sopa de Alinejas, 28. 

 Tapes Yirginea at Dawlish and 



Tenby, 27. 

 Taprobane, island of, productive of 



pearls, 89. 

 Taratufolo, 31. 

 Tarentine red, 204. 

 Tarentum, ancient dyeing-houses, 



204. 



Tartuffoli. 274 

 Tavernier's pearls, 98. 

 TellinidaB, 18. 

 Tellinidae rarely used for food in 



Great Britain, 18. 

 Telliridse mentioned by Athengeus, 



19. 



Tellinidae, sauces made of, 19. 

 Teredo, account of, 4. 

 Teredo, said to be good to eat, 4. 

 Teredo navalis, and Teredo norve- 



gicn, 4. 



Teuthidse, 263. 

 Teuthis, mentioned by Aristotle, 



263. 



Theognis, riddle of, 197. 

 Theophrastus on the habits of 

 snails, 228. 



Thrushes partial to snails, 222. 



Tootoofe, 257. 



Torbay-noses, or Oxhorn cockles, 



40. 



Torbay-noses, to dress, 41. 

 Totano, 262. 

 Trabea, Servius mentions two kinds 



of, 205. 

 Trabea, the royal robe worn by the 



early kings, 205. 



Trade, oyster, with Belgium, 128. 

 Trade, pickled oyster, 135. 

 Trade in snails at Covent Garden, 



221. 

 Tridacna gigas, shells of, used for 



holy-water, 148. 

 Trigonia pectinata, an Australian 



bivalve, 185. 

 Trigonia pectinata, bracelets, &c., 



made of the shells of, 185. 

 Triton nodiferus eaten at Marseilles, 



209. 

 TrochidaB sold occasionally as winkles 



at Jersey, 189. 

 Trochus found in the Creggauns 



heap, 149. 



Trochus crassus, 189. 

 Trochus zizyphinus eaten at Toulon, 



189. 



Trogmuscheln, 23. 

 Trompetenschnecke, or Kinkhorn, 



200. 



Trough-shell, or Mactra, 22. 

 Troyes supplies Paris with the vine- 

 snail ready boiled in their shells, 



231. 

 Tse-ga, Chinese name for Mya 



arenaria, 11. 

 Tumps, 176. 

 Turbinellidse, 196. 



Turbinella rapa, or chank-shell, 195. 

 Turbine! la rapa as a wind instru- 

 ment, 195. 

 Turbinella rapa made into rings for 



anklets and bracelets, 195. 

 Turbinella, reversed shells highly 



prized by the Chinese, 196. 

 Turbinella, consecrated oil kept in 



reversed shells by the Chinese, 



196. 

 Turbinella rapa, sacred shell of the 



Buddhists, 195. 



