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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1797
  • Page 25
  • A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1797: Page 25

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    Article A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. ← Page 4 of 4
Page 25

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Brief System Of Conchology.

Of these some are found remaining almost entirely in their native state , but others are variously altered by being impregnated with particles of stone and of other fossils ; in the place of others there is found mere stone or spar , or some other native mineral body , expressing all their lineaments in the most exact manner , as having been formed wholly from them , the shell having been first deposited in some solid matrix , and thence dissolved by very slow degrees , and

this matter left in its place , on the cavities of stone and other solid substances , out of which shells had been dissolved and washed awa 3 - , being afterwards filled up less slowly with these difterent . su'bstances , whether spar or whatever else : these substances , so filling the cavities , can necessarily be of no other form than that of the shell ,

rathe absence of which the cavity was owing , though all the nicer lineaments may not be soexactlyexpressed . Besides these , we have also in mail ]' places masses of stone formed within various shells ; and these having been received into the cavities of the shells while they were perfectly fluid , and having therefore nicety filled all their cavities , must retain the perfect figures of the internal part of the shell , when the shell itself should be worn away or perished from their outside .

The various species we find of these are , in many genera , as numerolis as the known recent ones ; and as we have in our own island not only the shells of our own shores , but those of many other very distant ones , so we have also many species , and those in great numbers , which are in their recent state , the inhabitants of other vet unknown or

unsearched seas and shores . The cockles , muscles , oysters , and the other common bivalves of our own seas , are very abundant : but we have also an amazing number of the nautilus kind , particularly of the nautilus graecorum , which though a shell not found living in our own or any neighbouring seas , yet is found buried in all our clay-pits about London and elsewhere ; and the most frequent of all fossil shells in some of our counties are the conchte anomise , which yet we know not of in any part of the world in their recent state . Of this sort also are the cornua ammonis and the giyphilte , with several of the echintte and others . i

The exact similitude of the known shells , recent and fossil , in their several kinds , will by no means suffer us to believe that these , though not yet known to us iu their living state , are , as some have idly thought , a sort of lusus natural . It is certain , that of the many known shores , very few , not even those of our own island , have been vet carefully searched for the shell-fish that inhabit them ; and as we see

in the nautilus graecorum an instance of shells being brought from very distant parts of the world to be buried here , we cannot wonder that yet unknown shores , or the unknown bottoms of deep seas , should have furnished us with many unknown shell-fish , which mayhave been brought with the rest ; whether that were at the time of the general deluge , or the effect of any other catastrophe of a like kind , or by whatever other means , to be left ia ( he yet uuhui'dened matter of ourstutiey and clayey strata .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-09-01, Page 25” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091797/page/25/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE OF MR. WILLIAM WHITE. Article 4
ADDENDA TO THE MEMOIR OF MR. THOMAS HULL, Article 5
ON THE PECULIAR EXCELLENCIES OF HANDEL'S MUSIC. Article 6
HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 7
CURSORY REMARKS ON SHAKSPEARE'S MEASURE FOR MEASURE. Article 10
THE COLLECTOR. Article 12
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF PETER PORCUPINE; Article 18
A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. Article 22
DESCRIPTION OF THE PEAK OF TENERIFFE. Article 26
ACCOUNT OF A REMARKABLE SLEEP-WALKER. Article 30
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
OPINIONS CONCERNING MASONRY. WITH THE CHARACTER OP A TRUE FREEMASON. Article 36
A CHARGE Article 37
A VINDICATION OF MASONRY. Article 40
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 41
REVIEW OP NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 42
POETRY. Article 50
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 54
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Page 25

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

A Brief System Of Conchology.

Of these some are found remaining almost entirely in their native state , but others are variously altered by being impregnated with particles of stone and of other fossils ; in the place of others there is found mere stone or spar , or some other native mineral body , expressing all their lineaments in the most exact manner , as having been formed wholly from them , the shell having been first deposited in some solid matrix , and thence dissolved by very slow degrees , and

this matter left in its place , on the cavities of stone and other solid substances , out of which shells had been dissolved and washed awa 3 - , being afterwards filled up less slowly with these difterent . su'bstances , whether spar or whatever else : these substances , so filling the cavities , can necessarily be of no other form than that of the shell ,

rathe absence of which the cavity was owing , though all the nicer lineaments may not be soexactlyexpressed . Besides these , we have also in mail ]' places masses of stone formed within various shells ; and these having been received into the cavities of the shells while they were perfectly fluid , and having therefore nicety filled all their cavities , must retain the perfect figures of the internal part of the shell , when the shell itself should be worn away or perished from their outside .

The various species we find of these are , in many genera , as numerolis as the known recent ones ; and as we have in our own island not only the shells of our own shores , but those of many other very distant ones , so we have also many species , and those in great numbers , which are in their recent state , the inhabitants of other vet unknown or

unsearched seas and shores . The cockles , muscles , oysters , and the other common bivalves of our own seas , are very abundant : but we have also an amazing number of the nautilus kind , particularly of the nautilus graecorum , which though a shell not found living in our own or any neighbouring seas , yet is found buried in all our clay-pits about London and elsewhere ; and the most frequent of all fossil shells in some of our counties are the conchte anomise , which yet we know not of in any part of the world in their recent state . Of this sort also are the cornua ammonis and the giyphilte , with several of the echintte and others . i

The exact similitude of the known shells , recent and fossil , in their several kinds , will by no means suffer us to believe that these , though not yet known to us iu their living state , are , as some have idly thought , a sort of lusus natural . It is certain , that of the many known shores , very few , not even those of our own island , have been vet carefully searched for the shell-fish that inhabit them ; and as we see

in the nautilus graecorum an instance of shells being brought from very distant parts of the world to be buried here , we cannot wonder that yet unknown shores , or the unknown bottoms of deep seas , should have furnished us with many unknown shell-fish , which mayhave been brought with the rest ; whether that were at the time of the general deluge , or the effect of any other catastrophe of a like kind , or by whatever other means , to be left ia ( he yet uuhui'dened matter of ourstutiey and clayey strata .

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