FOSSIL GASTROPODS. 



249 



Various shells, such as Marginella, Turhinella, etc., are 

 strung in bracelets and armlets by savages. Cyprcea moneta, 

 the cowry (Fig. 204), is used for money, and other shells 

 are worked into yarious shapes for wampum or aboriginal 

 money. Pig. 205 represents an Olivella, used by the Cal- 

 ifornian Indians as money. Murex and Pur;pura afford 

 the Tyrian dye. 



While a few Gastropods are pelagic, living upon the high 

 seas, such as lanthina and the Nudibranch Glaucus, most 

 of the species are submarine and live in all seas ; the hardier, 

 most widely diffused species living between tide-marks, the 

 more delicate forms in deep water, ranging from low-water 



Fie. 204. Fig. 205. 



Fio. 204.— Cjtpnso (noneto.— After Stearns 

 Fio. W6.— Olivella biplicata.—MteT Stearns. 



mark to fifty or one hundred fathoms. The abyssal fauna at 

 the depth of from 500 to about 2000 fathoms has a few char- 

 acteristic jnoUusks. Many live on land and in fresh water. 

 The largest, most highly colored shells live in the tropics, 

 while those found in the temperate zones are less beautiful, 

 and the arctic species are the smallest and dullest in color. 

 The shells of the eastern coast of North America are 

 divided into several assemblages, or faunae, the West Indian 

 or tropical shells, in some cases, reaching as far north as 

 Cape Hatteras ; between this point and Cape Cod a north 

 temperate assemblage occurs, and north of Cape Cod the 

 molluscan fauna is essentially Arctic ; many species being 

 common to the arctic and subarctic seas of the circumpolar 

 regions. 



