138 NATURAL HISTORY 
Fig. ix. A botrueid, or high-blidered, fparkling mundic-incruda- 
tion on the cleared: crydal, the colour of the mod polifhed brafs. 
x. Stiliatitious mundic, fparkling, yellow, pendant, from the 
Pool copper-work in Illogan \ 
xi. The tubercles or bliders oval, inclined in parallel direction ; 
on the fummit they have mammillae or nipples ; the furface fprinkled 
with a gold-coloured and purple powder ; the texture brown flaky- 
mundic, very uncommon. Likely dillatitious. 
xii. Oval bliders of the brown-mundic, cludered like a pine- 
apple, fprinkled with gold powder as the former, on a bed of 
copper. 
xiii. Brafs-coloured mundic of a velvet glofs, wreathed in the 
fhape of a turbinated fhell, from the mould of which it feems to 
have borrowed its figure, and may therefore be reckoned an extra- 
neous foflil: from Pendarves. It is one of the cochleomorphites of 
Dr. Plot, ( Oxfordfhire, Tab. VI. Fig. n.) and what Lhuyd, in 
his Lithophylacium, calls the Nerita foJfiks> N°. 312. 
xiv. ? Bliders like reclined tubes, formed of parallel rings, as if 
worms or caterpillers half buried in the ground of mundic r . 
xv. Buttony mundic in five perfectly globular protuberances. 
Circular con- xvi. A wavy bordure, or cordon of brafs-coloured mundic, 
cave mundics poi nte d at one end, and at the other fpreading into a circle, end- 
ing in a fmall cavity, and inclofing a larger in the fhape of an in- 
verted cone, which has three feveral dages of radiated fibres. 
xvii. Several fegments of circles, creded with a continued adragal, 
which edges a tuft of the larged-fpangled brafs-coloured mundic. 
xvi 11. A piece of fpangled brafs-coloured mundic in relieve, with 
a fringed edging fhaped by five fegments of a circle ingrailed, or 
with the points where they meet outwards. 
xix. This beautiful piece of lace- work is at 0, funk into the 
mod exadt circular cavity, from whence the fix lids or threads turn 
off on either hand, and protruding themfelves into various angles, 
and preferving their parallelifm throughout, trace round the extre- 
mities of this rare fpecimen. From a tin-mine, called Ludgvan- 
lez work, in the parifh of Ludgvan. 
xx. On the top there is a molding of fringy, tufted, brafs-co- 
loured mundic, which divides the fpangled furface into compart- 
ments, as k , and makes the upper brim of the cavities with which 
this fpecimen is fo didinguifhed. Below this tufted edge runs a 
mod exadt circular lid, b, h> h, which gives great regularity to the 
cavities underneath. This lid has little breaks in it, like an adragal 
'i See of this fort two other fpecimens, PI. XVI. r See Plate XVI. Fig. liv, lv, lvi. page 
Fig. xxxiv. and xxxv. page 141. 141. 
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