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Ch.14: River Pearls, British & Foreign

Ch.14: River Pearls, British & Foreign Page of 341 Ch.14: River Pearls, British & Foreign Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
River Pearls ; British and Foreign.          249
If any are detected, they cut the muscles which hold the two valves together, and extract the Pearls ; but if none are found, the creature is restored un­injured to the water. The Pearls are put into a bottle of water on the spot, and afterwards dried and sorted in the house. Sometimes a mussel will be found with small Pearls in it, which give promise of better growth. Such shells are marked with the point of the iron and put back. Sometimes excel­lent Pearls have been obtained from mussels which have been so treated."
In Bavaria the principal rivers which yield Pearl-bearing mussels are those of the Bayrische Wald, or Bavarian Forest, between Regensburg (Ratisbon), and Passau, and some others which take their rise further north, in the Fichtelgebirge. The most celebrated rivers are the Ilz and the Regen. At the Nuremberg Exhibition of Bavarian Products in 1882, there was displayed a large collection of the shells and Pearls, together with examples of the artificial production of Pearls by causing the mol­lusc to deposit nacre on small moulds of fanciful shapes, after the Chinese method, which will be explained below. The Bavarian Pearls have been carefully studied by Dr. Theodor Von Hessling, who has written an elaborate monograph on the subject.
River-Pearls are also found occasionally in the
Ch.14: River Pearls, British & Foreign Page of 341 Ch.14: River Pearls, British & Foreign
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