BIVALVE MOLLUSC A. 



36s 



grina margaritifera ; being the same secretion which in the pearl has 

 assumed the globular form : in one state it is deposited as nacre on 

 the walls of the bivalve, in the other as a pearl in the fleshy interior 

 of the animal. This nacre is therefore at once a calcareous and a 

 horny substance, which the animal secretes, and which it attaches to 

 the interior walls of the shell during the several periods of its develop- 

 ment. Pearls are formed of the same substance, only in place of 

 being deposited upon the valves in beds, the material is condensed 

 and agglomerated in small spheroids, which develop themselves 

 either on the surface of the valves or in the fleshy part of the mollusc. 



V\g. 164.- Mclcr.griiia msrganti craj' I,Inna;i;s;. 



Between nacre and pearls, therefore, there is only the difference of 

 the form of deposition. Fig. 164 represents the pearl oyster with 

 calcareous concretions in various states of progress. 



The finest pearls — solidified drops of dew, as the Orientals terai 

 them in the language of poetiy — are secretions of nacrous material 

 supposed to be spread over foreign bodies which have accidentally 

 got beneath the mantle of the mollusc. The matter, in place of 

 being spread over the surface of the valves in their beds, is condensed 

 either on the centre of the valves or in the interior of the ore:an, and 

 foniis a more or less rounded body. The pearls, when deposited on 

 the valves, are generally adherent ; those which originate in the body 

 of the animal are always free. Generally we find some small foreign 

 body in their centre which has served as a nucleus to the concretion, 

 the body being perhaps a sterile egg of the mollusc, the egg of a fish, 



