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Ch. 12: Pearls

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UNITED STATES, CANADA AND MEXICO                      235
her an Iroquois wampum belt, bearing the marks of age, which they immediately pronounced to have been made after their manner. Although they had been familiar with Indians, they had never known of their making the beads. They had always depended upon the trappers for their market, and related inci­dents connected with their dealings with "fur companies," etc. The conch-shell is used also in the manufacture of "pipes," beads, rosettes, etc. The " pipes " vary in length from 2 to 6 inches, and resemble a tobacco-pipe stem with bulging sides ; those of 6 inches in length are quite rare, and are highly prized. The rosettes consist of a concentric series of round, flat disks placed on them, secured one to the other by means of a string passed through the holes drilled in the center.
The common oysters (Ostrea borealis and Ostrea Virginica) occasionally secrete one or more pearly bodies, always dead-white in color. The reflections produced by their fibrous, radi­ated structure is similar to that observed in the common conch. The " skin " of these pearls is never smooth or lustrous, and consequently they have no value. Rev. Horace C. Hovey, in a letter to the author states that he had found twenty-nine pearls in a single common oyster (O. borealis) at New Haven, Conn. In the Smithsonian report for 1881 it is stated that Charles E. Ash took forty-five pearls from a single oyster in Providence Bay. A curiously formed oyster pearl is shown in Fig. 12.
Conch Pearls.—That is, the concretions found in the common conch (Strombus gigas), are not nacreous, and there­fore cannot be considered true pearls. They are usually a little elongated or oblong in form, rarely round, and most of them are very beautiful, owing to the reflections produced by their fibrous stellated structure causing the light to play over the surface, but giving a different effect from the cat's-eye or that of satin-spar. They are almost always pink in color and the fine ones are wonderfully lustrous.
James R. Curry, of Key West, Fla., states that there and at Tortugas, fully 15,000 of these shells are used annually for food and for bait, being sold at the rate of three for ten cents,
Ch. 12: Pearls Page of 364 Ch. 12: Pearls
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