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The Book of Shells: A Life-Size Guide to Identifying and Classifying Six Hundred Seashells

The Book of Shells: A Life-Size Guide to Identifying and Classifying Six Hundred Seashells

by M.G. Harasewych (Author), Fabio Moretzsohn (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
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Customers find this shell guide to be a valuable resource, with one noting its helpful related species sections for identification. The book features beautiful pictures, and one customer describes it as a compendium of mind-boggling content. Customers consider it good value for money.

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Who among us hasn’t marveled at the diversity and beauty of shells? Or picked one up, held it to our ear, and then gazed in wonder at its shape and hue? Many a lifelong shell collector has cut teeth (and toes) on the beaches of the Jersey Shore, the Outer Banks, or the coasts of Sanibel Island. Some have even dived to the depths of the ocean. But most of us are not familiar with the biological origin of shells, their role in explaining evolutionary history, and the incredible variety of forms in which they come. Shells are the external skeletons of mollusks, an ancient and diverse phylum of invertebrates that are in the earliest fossil record of multicellular life over 500 million years ago. There are over 100,000 kinds of recorded mollusks, and some estimate that there are over amillion more that have yet to be discovered. Some breathe air, others live in fresh water, but most live in the ocean. They range in size from a grain of sand to a beach ball and in weight from a few grams to several hundred pounds. And in this lavishly illustrated volume, they finally get their full due. The Book of Shells offers a visually stunning and scientifically engaging guide to six hundred of the most intriguing mollusk shells, each chosen to convey the range of shapes and sizes that occur across a range of species. Each shell is reproduced here at its actual size, in full color, and is accompanied by an explanation of the shell’s range, distribution, abundance, habitat, and operculum—the piece that protects the mollusk when it’s in the shell. Brief scientific and historical accounts of each shell and related species include fun-filled facts and anecdotes that broaden its portrait. The Matchless Cone, for instance, or Conus cedonulli, was one of the rarest shells collected during the eighteenth century. So much so, in fact, that a specimen in 1796 was sold for more than six times as much as a painting by Vermeer at the same auction. But since the advent of scuba diving, this shell has become far more accessible to collectors—though not without certain risks. Some species of Conus produce venom that has caused more than thirty known human deaths. The Zebra Nerite, the Heart Cockle, the Indian Babylon, the Junonia, the Atlantic Thorny Oyster—shells from habitats spanning the poles and the tropics, from the highest mountains to the ocean’s deepest recesses, are all on display in this definitive work. Read more

Product Information

ASINB00R4FQDDM
X-RayNot Enabled
EditionIllustrated
ISBN-13978-0226177052
LanguageEnglish
File size146.1 MB
Page FlipEnabled
PublisherThe University of Chicago Press
Word WiseNot Enabled
Print length658 pages
AccessibilityLearn more
Screen ReaderSupported
Customer Reviews4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 151 ratings
Publication dateDecember 10, 2014
Best Sellers Rank#302,928 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store) #3 in Seashells (Kindle Store) #23 in Seashells (Books) #26 in Marine Biology (Kindle Store)
Enhanced typesettingEnabled

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