The Sepia or Cuttle-fish of our seas is of an oblong form, and composed of a soft substance covered with a tough integument or skin: it varies from a few inches to a foot or more in length. The mouth is placed in the centre of one extremity of the body, and has a pair of powerful, curved, horny mandibles, much resembling the beaks of a parrot: it is surrounded by eight long arms like the rays of a star-fish, and these are beset with rows of little cups which act as suckers, and enable the animal to secure its prey, and attach itself with great firmness to any object.[AC] It has a distinct head, with two eyes as perfect as in the vertebrated animals, and complicated organs of hearing: and below the head there is a tube or funnel which acts as a locomotive instrument, and propels the animal backwards by the forcible ejection of the water which has served the purpose of respiration, and can be thrown out with considerable force by the contraction of the body. The soft parts are supported by a large internal bone or osselet of a very curious structure, which, when dried and reduced to powder, forms the substance used by scriveners, termed pounce. These naked mollusca also possess a membranous bag or sac, containing a dark-coloured fluid resembling ink in appearance, which they eject into the surrounding water upon the approach of danger, and by the obscurity thus induced foil the pursuit of their enemies. This fluid, when inspissated, forms the base of the colour termed sepia by artists.
[AC] From this arrangement of the organs of prehension around the head, this order of mollusca is termed the Cephalopoda; i. e., the feet around the head.
The body of the Nautilus resembles in its essential characters that of the Cuttle-fish, and occupies the large outer receptacle of the shell; maintaining a connection with the inner compartments by means of the membranous siphunculus or tube, which is only partially invested with shell. The internal chambers are air-cells, and the animal can fill the siphunculus with fluid, or exhaust it at will; the difference thus effected in its specific gravity enables it to rise to the surface or sink to the bottom with facility. Now if' we imagine a Cuttle-fish placed in the outer chamber of a Nautilus-shell, and provided with a siphuncule, but having neither ink-bag nor osselet—these organs being unnecessary to an animal possessing a chambered shell—we shall have a general idea of the nature of the recent species.
The Nautilus is essentially an inhabitant of deep water: it creeps along the ground at the bottom of the sea, with its shell upwards like the snail; and by means of its arms can proceed with considerable speed.[AD]
[AD] See 'Conchologia Systematica,' vol. ii. p. 302, and 'Elements of Conchology,' p. 22, by Mr. Lovell Reeve, F.L.S., for an admirable description of the recent Nautilus, with illustrations.
A large and splendid species of fossil Nautilus is not uncommon in the London Clay of the Isle of Sheppey, Sussex, and Hampshire. The chambers are often lined with spar or other brilliant mineral matter; and polished sections, like those of the Ammonites, admirably display the internal structure.[AE]
[AE] See Dr. Buckland's 'Bridgewater Treatise' for numerous figures of Ammonites and Nautili; plates 31 to 34. Consult also 'Medals of Creation,' vol. ii. p. 457.
[Note V.] [Page 27.] Brighton Cliffs.
BRIGHTON CLIFFS.
The stranger who approaches Brighton by the railroads through deep tunnels and cuttings in the chalk, and perceives the town spread over the plain and on the sides of a valley of the South Downs, will naturally expect to find the sea-shore bounded by chalk-cliffs. But a wall of admirable construction, extends from the Steyne to beyond Kemptown, and effectually conceals from view the materials that compose the site of that part of Brighton; a ramble along the shore to Rottingdean is therefore necessary to reveal to the inquiring observer, the nature of the strata that flank the southern border of the Downs.