BRACHIOPODA. 333 



pedicle-sheath in its entirety, we shall then have the terms spondijlium and delli- 

 dium applied to corresponding and equivalent modified parts of this plate, the 

 former internal, the latter external. 



The adult condition of the shell does not always furnish complete, and some- 

 times not even suggestive evidence of the relations of the spondyliuin and 

 deltidium. For example, in the genus Orthis and its various subdivisions, the 

 delthyrium is almost always open at maturity and indeed all through the later 

 growth-stages of the shell. Tlie deltidium unquestionably existed at an early 

 stage and has usually become resorbed long before evidences of maturity in 

 other re.spects aie assumed; the spondylium, also, does not pass beyond a 

 condition which makes the pedicle-cavity a clearly defnied feature of the inte- 

 rior. Tn more elementary or less modified orthoid structures like Billixgsell.a., 

 PiiOTORTHis, and the Orthis dcfleda and 0. loricula (see Plate Va, figs. 30, 31), 

 the deltidium is fully retained at maturity, while the spondylium remains in its 

 condition of a simple pedicle-cavity. The coexistence of l)otli features with a 

 high degree of development, as in Cutamuonites, Polykeciiia, etc, indicates a 

 more primitive condition than in Orthis, thougli in such cases the extension of 

 the spondylium to such a degree as to carry all the muscular bands of the 

 pedicle-valve must be regarded as a secondary modification of this organ. In 

 Pentamerus and allied genera, where the spondylium attains its greatest de- 

 velopment, the deltidium is usually lost, but when retained is very thin and has 

 a concave exterior, a form doubtless largely due to the arching of the umbo of 

 the pedicle-valve over the full, procumbent beak of the brachial valve. The 

 spondylium occurs in various modified conditions ; in cases where the teeth are 

 wholly without dental lamellae, or where such lamellte do not extend to the 

 bottom of the valve, it seems necessarj^ to regard them as instances of 

 degeneracy or resorption of the primitive spondylium. As the growth, modifi- 

 cation and disappearance of the differential parts of the prodeltidium do not 

 progress pari passu, there will frequently be examples of one being retained 

 when the other has disappeared. A remarkable illustration of this f\ict is 

 afforded hy the genus Camaropiioria, which possesses a highly developed spon- 



