Abstract

Studies in the variation of the Anthracosiidæ (= Carbonicolidæ) in the South Wales Coalfield by Davies and Trueman (1927) and in the Scottish Coalfields by Leitch (1936, 1940, 1941) have suggested that environmental influence on shell form is confined to changes in thickness of shell and in obesity. Davies and Trueman quoted H. R. Wakefield, who remarked that to-day among the Unionidæ these characters appear to vary according to the station of the shells in a single lake. Leitch referred to the work of Ortmann (1920) on the relation between obesity and distribution of river mussels in a large drainage basin in the U.S.A. The writer, in the course of very detailed work on the most highly variable faunas of the Anthracosiidæ known in the British Coal Measures, found evidence suggesting that certain other changes in shell shape and dimensions may also accompany environmental changes, as far as past environments may be reflected in the lithology of the rocks containing the shells.

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