CARDIUM. 241 



STRAWBERRY COCKLE. 

 PL 58./. 1, 2. Dr. Coombe. 



60. Cardium Fragum. C. testa subcordata, subangulata ; costis notatis 



lunulis elevatis. Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 12. p. 1123. Linn. Gmel. p. 



3249. 

 Shell somewhat heart-shaped, subangular; ribs marked with elevated 



rings. 

 List. Conch, pi. 315. f. 152. Petiver Aquat. Ami), pi. 18. f. 21. Rumph. 



Mus. pi. 44. f. G. Gualt. Test. pi. 83. f. E. Born Test. pi. 3. f. 



3, 4. Chem. Conch. 6. pi. 16. f. 166, 167. Encyclop. Method, pi. 295. 



f. 3. a— e. 



A whitish, or yellowish shell, formed of three un- 

 equal planes ; the anterior face is raised in the middle, 

 so as to form an obtuse angle ; the two posterior faces 

 are round, and their edges describe the segment of a 

 circle. It has on each valve, about twenty-three convex, 

 longitudinal ribs, eleven of which, on the anterior face, 

 are partly covered with little rough scales, the upper 

 part of the shell being smooth ; the scales on the pos- 

 terior face are farther apart, thicker, and more promi- 

 nent, but not so numerous as those before ; the margins 

 of the valves are crenated; the anterior margin is deeply 

 serrated, and does not shut so close as the rest of the 

 shell ; the summits are conic, slightly oblique, and sepa- 

 rated from each other by a thread line. The inside is 

 white, with a yellow, or orange band, extending from 

 the summit to the middle of the cavity; there are five 

 teeth in each valve, two at the beak, two lateral, and 

 one long and conical, just before the ligament ; all these 

 teeth are articulated into corresponding cavities in the 

 opposite valve. 



Inhabits the Indian seas, and, according to Linnaeus, 

 is sometimes found in the American ocean. 



VOL. I. R 



