- Description
- Keen, 1958, describes the
Pen Shells as being slender, fragile, and so brittle that for protection they lie buried
in mud with the pointed end down. They are anchored there by a tuft of fine fibers (byssal
threads) which are secreted by glands of the foot. Keen further recounts the following
fascinating history:
-
- "The fine golden-brown byssal fibers of the Mediterranean Pinna were used to weave
the legendary Cloth-of-Gold, a fabric that must have rivalled our finest synthetics, for a
woman's scarf of this material was said to be so flexible it could be rolled into a ball
the size of a walnut. So much work was involved to harvest enough of the Pinnas and to
process the fiber for weaving, however, that the cloth could be afforded only by
royalty."
-
- Classification
- Class: Bivalvia
- Subclass: Pteriomorpha
- Order: Mytiloida
- Superfamily: Pinnacea
- Family: Pinnidae
-
- Major Genera
- Genus: Atrina
- Genus: Pinna
- Genus: Streptopinna
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Pinna rugosa (Sowerby, 1835)
Rugose Pen Shell
SEE THE LIVE MOLLUSC: Doug Segar and Elaine Stamman Segar, reefimages.com
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