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Ch. 2: Gems in Ceylon

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PEARLS.
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of North America, and at the West Indies. Pearls produced by shells which inhabit the rivers and lakes of Great Britain and foreign countries are described iu Chapter XIV., and the artificial production of pearls by the Chinese is also here referred to. The different kinds of coloured pearls, and the mollusks which produce them, are then treated of. In the succeeding chapter the most famous pearls of both ancient and modern times are recounted, and the immense sums at which some of them were valued are stated. Chapter XVII. gives the history of the remarkable cluster of pearls known as " the great Southern Cross pearl," which was exhibited in the West Australian Court of the Colonial and Indian Exhibition, and valued by the owneis at io,oOoA The next and concluding chapter is devoted to the value of pearls, and shows how their worth has varied in this country at different periods from 1671 to the present time.
A map is then introduced showing the principal pearling regions. In an appendix, the works bearing on the subject which have been consulted by the author are enumerated, and a full index completes the volume.
Mr. Streeler has brought together a large amount of information which will be of interest to the general reader, for whom especially, and not for the scientific, the work has been written. The most original material is com­prised in the part extending from the seventh to the tenth chapter. The chap­ter devoted to the Sooloo Archipelago contains some details which, although interesting in themselves, are rather foreign to the subject of the work.
The same observation applies to the account of the constellation Crux Australis, or Southern Cross, introduced in the seventeenth chapter.
As far as we have noticed, the various opinions and statements set forth in the work are mostly accurate. It may, however, be questioned whether " there is perhaps no instinct implanted in the human breast more powerful than the love admiration," for is not that of self-preservation supposed to regin supreme? We would point out that the term Lamellibranchiata is now supersed by that of Pelccypoda, and with good and sufficient reasons is adopted in the latest and best manuals on conchology. The bathymetrical range of bivalvs far exceeds the stated limit—200 .fathoms—specimens having been obtained by the Challennger and, other deep-sea exploring expeditions in depths ranging as low down as 2,900 fathoms.
The book is printed in good legible type upon toned paper, but the pic­torial portion mars the rest. The plates illustrating the Malleus, the Meleagrina, the Unto,, the Pinna, the Strombus, and the Turbinella are simply execrable. They are printed upon a fearful black ground (one almost expects to see " Sacred to the memory of," &c), inclosed by a thin white line with ornamental corners, and seem to us to have a most common appearance. We cannot see one redeeming feature in them, the drawing and colouring of the shells being equally bad. If another edition is called for, fresh and accurat illustrations should be provided.—E. A. S.—Nature.
_The pearl shells arc beautifully engraved in Tennent's Natural History of Ceylon.—Compilers.]
THE METHOD OF COMPUTING THE VALUE OF PEARLS AT MADRAS.
Pearls are sold at a certain stipulated price per chour as the parties may agree.
Seed pearls or such as are below 600 sieve are sold by the ounce Troy or other weight.
The chour is more or less valuable as the pearls are more or less perfect or agreeable to existing taste.
At Madras, pearls are strung in lengths nearly about that required for a woman's necklace. Of these strings any number composed of similar pearls and of the same number are collected into a bunch or bundle.
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