BIVALVE MOLLUSC A. 



3/1 



nine pennyweights, all of perfect form and of the finest water. The 

 Romans were passionately fond of pearls, and they have transmitted 

 their taste to the Eastern nations, who attach notions of 

 grandeur and wealth to the possessor of large and brilliant pearls 



great 



The genus Fi?tna,\va.?, so called by Linnaeus, from one of the species 

 which was so designated from the resemblance of its byssus to the 

 aigrette or plumelet which the Roman so^fiers attached to the helmet. 

 French naturalists name them jaj/iboniicaiix, from their singular resem- 



b"ig. 165. — Pinna ruJis (Linnaeus). 



Fig. 166. — Pinna nigrina (Lamarck). 



blance to a dried ham (Figs. 165 and 166), their brown, smoky colour 

 not a little aiding the resemblance. The shell is fibrous, horny, very 

 thin and fragile, compressed, regular, and equivalve, triangularly 

 pointed in front, round or truncated behind. The hinge is linear, 

 straight, and without teeth ; the ligament, in great part internal, 

 occupies more than half the anterior portion of the dorsal edge of the 

 shell, fomiing a straight elongated fossette. 



The animal is thick, elongated, with mantle open behind, presenting 

 a conical furrowed foot, bearing a considerable byssus. 



The species of the genus Pinna are found in almost every sea, and 

 at various depths ; they are constantly attached by their byssus, and 



y 2 



