Gigantic clams, nearly five feet long and weighing more than 400 pounds, who raise crops of microscopic plants for their own sustenance are among nature’s fantasies found on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. These molluscan titans have formed a curious partnership with the zooxanthellae, a family of microscopic algae. The plants live as parasites in the blood cells of the inner lobe of the clam’s mantle. Upon this mantle is a lens-like structure which looks like an eye. These mollusks, however, are blind as any other clams and the eye-like protuberances, it has been determined, are only windows by which light is admitted to the parasitic algae within the blood cells. The surplus of algae is carried by the blood stream to the clam’s digestive organs where it serves as food.
Another giant clam, the tridacna of East Indian seas, may weigh up to 600 pounds. The monsters constitute a peril for divers who unwittingly step inside the open valves. These snap shut, imprisoning the diver’s foot and, unless he can get help, he is held in the trap and drowned.
Pearls Grow in Brooks
Excellent pearls occur occasionally in fresh water clams. A pearl of perfect form and pure color was found in such a clam taken from a brook near Paterson, New Jersey, in 1857. It sold at Tiffany’s for $1,000 and shortly afterwards was resold in Paris for $2,200. This started pearl hunts in brooks all over the country.
On the arrival of Europeans in Florida, Louisiana and Virginia, fabulous legends were circulated about the enormous treasures to be obtained by plundering Indian graves. A contemporary chronicler of the audacious DeSoto expedition, reported that the conquistadore got 350 pounds of fine pearls at the Creek town of Cofitachique on the Savannah River.
A member of the first Virginia colony “gathered together from among the savage people about five thousande; of which number he chose so many as mayd a fayre chain; which for their likenesse and uniformitie in roundnesse, orietnesse and pidenesse, of many excellente colours with equalities in greatnesse were verie fayre and rare.”
The supply, however, was quite limited. Indian pearls were the subject of a special study by the late Dr. William H. Holmes. “The majority of those obtained,” he reported, “were ruined as jewels by the heat employed in opening the shellfish from which they were abstracted. Many of the larger specimens probably were not real pearls but polished beads cut from the nacre of sea shells and quite worthless as gems. It has been found that the real pearls were obtained from bivalve shells—from the oyster along the sea shore and in tidewater inlets and from the mussel on the shores of lakes and rivers.
“But the very general use of pearls by the pre-Columbian natives is amply attested. More than 60,000, nearly two pecks, were obtained, drilled and undrilled, from a single burial mound near Madisonville, Ohio.”
Grasshopper-Infested Glaciers
Among America’s natural curiosities are “grasshopper glaciers.” These are great masses of glacial ice containing layers of imbedded, frozen grasshoppers. Such layers are probably remnants of vast migrations which have taken place at irregular intervals over several centuries. Great hordes of the insects either flew over the glacier or were carried there by winds, and while there sudden snow storms or cold air rising from the ice field caused them to drop. They were imbedded so quickly in the falling snow, which later became ice, that they have remained perfectly preserved for centuries. The most notable of these glaciers is in the Beartooth mountains of Montana. Others have been reported from the high mountains of Africa.