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Lamellibranchia Collection

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Extinct marine reptiles

Extinct marine reptiles
Sheet 1 of a series of posters called Extinct Animals by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins c. 1862. This collection of marine reptiles lived during the Jurassic period between 200

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Pleuroploca trapezium, trapezium horse conch

Pleuroploca trapezium, trapezium horse conch
A pair of trapezium horse conch (Pleuroploca trapezium). This marine gastropod originates from the Indo-Pacific

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Pecten sp. scallop

Pecten sp. scallop
A fossil scallop from the Corallian Crag of Suffolk, England. Scallop shells are made up of two hinged plates and are a genus of bivalve mollusc

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Tridacna gigas, giant clam

Tridacna gigas, giant clam
A pair of giant clam (Tridacna gigas). This endangered species is the largest living molluscs and can reach sizes of over 1m

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Hippurites radiosus, rudist mollusc shell

Hippurites radiosus, rudist mollusc shell
Rudist mollusc shells are elongated molluscs and were also reef builders. Specimen dates from the Late Cretaceous, Des Moulins, Charente, France

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Oyster shell with pearl

Oyster shell with pearl
Oyster is a name given to a group of molluscs which can be found on sea beds, often in coastal waters. The pearl, a smooth spherical object can form inside its shell

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Five bivalve fossils

Five bivalve fossils
(Top) Chlamys fibrosa; (Centre left) Chlamys splendens; (Centre right) Perampliata ampliata; (Lower left) Mytilus ungulatus; (Lower right) Trigonia reticulata

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Tridacna maxima R�g, 1798, giant clam

Tridacna maxima R�g, 1798, giant clam
Plate 76 from a bound volume of illustrations used for Lamarcks Genera of shells. Watercolour and graphite on paper, c. 1820 by Anna Children (became Atkins) (1799-1871) Date: 1820

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Epidiceras speciosum (Munster), internal cast of bivalve

Epidiceras speciosum (Munster), internal cast of bivalve
Steinkern (internal cast) of a bizarrre rudist bivalve from the Jurassic period. Specimen from the Upper Kimmeridgian rocks, Kelheim, Bavaria, Germany

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Mollusc, Arca (Barbatia) novaezelandiae

Mollusc, Arca (Barbatia) novaezelandiae
Specimen collected by Robert Falcon Scotts British Antarctic Expedition 1910-1913, also known as the Terra Nova expedition

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Six molluscs including four gastropods and two bivalves

Six molluscs including four gastropods and two bivalves
Watercolour 396 by the Port Jackson Painter, from the Watling Collection

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Shipworm borings

Shipworm borings
This block of wood was attacked by Teredo navalis, common shipworm about 50 million years ago

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Opalised snails and clam

Opalised snails and clam
Found in the South Australia town of Coober Pedy, these ancient snail and clam shells have been preserved in semi-precious opal

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Glove knitted from the beard threads of the pen shell (Pin

Glove knitted from the beard threads of the pen shell (Pin
Made in the 1700s from the beard threads of the pen shell (Pinna nobilis), a large Mediterranean mollusc

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Seven molluscs, including two bivalves and five gastropods

Seven molluscs, including two bivalves and five gastropods
Watercolour 390 by the Port Jackson Painter, entitled Wee-ang-i, Ger-my, Won-ni, Goo-rung, from the Watling Collection

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Four different molluscs

Four different molluscs
Watercolour 397 by the Port Jackson Painter, entitled gna-go-rang, from the Watling Collection

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Myophorella incurva, steinkern of bivalve

Myophorella incurva, steinkern of bivalve
Osses Ed - steinkern or internal cast of bivalve Myophorella incurva (J. de C. Sowerby) originating from thePortland Oolite, Portland

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Gryphaea incurva, oyster

Gryphaea incurva, oyster
Fossil oyster also known as the Devils Toenail, specimen from the Lower Lias, Gloucestershire

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Pleuroploca trapezium, trapezium horse conch

Pleuroploca trapezium, trapezium horse conch
A pair of trapezium horse conch (Pleuroploca trapezium). This marine gastropod originates from the Indo-Pacific

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Spondylus imperialis, imperial thorny oyster

Spondylus imperialis, imperial thorny oyster
A pair of imperial thorny oysters (Spondylus imperalis) This bivalve can be found in the waters surrounding the Philippines

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Plagiostoma, fossil shell

Plagiostoma, fossil shell
This shell of Plagiostoma from the British Jurassic measures 8.5 cm wide and shows radial ornamentation and growth banding

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: On the dredge

On the dredge
Common dredge as descibed by Professor Edward Forbes. Anatomical Manipulation, Tulk and Henfrey 1843

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Spondylus pictorum, painted thorny oyster

Spondylus pictorum, painted thorny oyster
A pair of painted thorny oysters (Spondylus pictorum). This bivalve can be found offshore up to 50 metres in the Mediterranean and Red seas

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Turtle skull bivalve

Turtle skull bivalve
PDT unreg. Steinkern or internal cast of an unidentified bivalve, Cretaceous, North Carolina, U.S.A

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Spondylus gaederopus, European thorny oyster

Spondylus gaederopus, European thorny oyster
A pair European thorny oysters (Spondylus gaederopus). This thorny bivalve is distributed around northwest coasts of Africa

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Bathymodiolus elongatus, giant vent mussel

Bathymodiolus elongatus, giant vent mussel
Specimen of the giant vent mussel (Bathymodiolus elongatus). Thes huge mollusc are know only the north Fiji basin where they live in hydrothermal vents at a depth of 2800m

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Chespecten jeffersonius, scallop

Chespecten jeffersonius, scallop
Specimen of the scallop (Chespecten jeffersonius), this shell originated from the Miocene era, some 23-7 million years ago. Maryland, USA

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Gloripallium pallium, glory scallop

Gloripallium pallium, glory scallop
Detail of shell ribs on the glory scallop shell (Gloripallium pallium)

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Spodylus americanus, thorny oyster

Spodylus americanus, thorny oyster
Watercolour of a thorny oyster on blue paper by Sarah Stone (c. 1760-1844) from the collection of Sir Ashton Lever

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Aviculopecten planoradiatus, bivalve

Aviculopecten planoradiatus, bivalve
Fossilised relics of this fan-shaped bivalve. Bivalves are shelled creatures and first appeared in the middle Cambrian, some 520 million years ago, they are still common in todays oceans

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Fossilised Tellinella rostralis, tellin bivalve

Fossilised Tellinella rostralis, tellin bivalve
Fossilised specimen of a Tellin bivalve from Ecocene Belgium, 58 million years ago. Bivalves are hinged molluscs which first appeared in the Middle Cambrian some 500 million years ago

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Scabrotrigonia thoracica, bivalve

Scabrotrigonia thoracica, bivalve
This horny-ribbed bivalve dates from the late Cretaceous period (142 million years ago), they are still common in todays seas and oceans

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Bivalve mollusc

Bivalve mollusc

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Gryphaea arcuata Lamarck, fossil oysters

Gryphaea arcuata Lamarck, fossil oysters
About 190 million years old, found in the Lias clays and limestones of the Jurassic period. Commonly called Devils Toenails

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Collection of molluscs

Collection of molluscs
Plate 16 from The History of Rutherglen and East-Kilbride by David Ure ( 1793)

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Dipsas sp

Dipsas sp
Plate 10, a holotype from Arhtur MacGregors Hans Sloane, 1994. Shell specimens showing Sir Hans Sloanes catalogue numbers

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Spomdylus imperialis, imperial thorny oyster

Spomdylus imperialis, imperial thorny oyster

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Haliotis fulgens, green abalone

Haliotis fulgens, green abalone
A pair of green abalone shells (Haliotis fulgens). This bivalve can been found upto 10m offshore in California

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Gryphaea dilatata, devils toenail

Gryphaea dilatata, devils toenail
This giant hooked oyster also known as a devils toenail originates from Sowerby, Upper Jurassic, Scarborough, Yorkshire, England

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Hyolithes, primitive mollusc

Hyolithes, primitive mollusc
Shown here is Hyolithes, a Cambrian primitive mollusc. Hyolithes had an oval or cone-shaped, elongated shell and often occured in clusters along bedding planes of Cambrian shale

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Ostrea sp. oyster with pearls

Ostrea sp. oyster with pearls
Oysters are bivalve molluscs found on the sea bed. Pearls, are smooth, spherical objects which can form inside their shells. They are considered valuable and are farmed and used to make jewellery

Background imageLamellibranchia Collection: Trigona, bivalves

Trigona, bivalves
Shown here are a pair of Jurassic bivalves. Bivalves are shelled creatures and first appeared in the Middle Cambrian and are still common in todays seas and oceans



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