Abstract
THE production of pearls by numerous species belonging to the fresh-water bivalve family Unionidae has been a matter of common knowledge from time immemorial. Such pearl-bearing mussels occur in the Tay, Isla, and several others of the rivers of the British islands, as well as in many of those of the continent, Mesopotamia, China, and North and South America. As a rule, however, such fresh-water pearls, in Europe at least, are inferior in lustre, and consequently in value, to those obtained from the pearl-oyster; and in those British rivers which produce the pearl-bearing species of Unio, it is stated that on the average one pearl is found in every hundred shells, and that only one pearl out of a hundred is fairly clear. During the eighteenth century, however, a considerable number of Irish pearls, ranging in value between 4l. and 10l., were obtained, while one specimen, when mounted, realised 80l. In Scotland, pearls worth from 3l. to 4l. each are not unfrequently found, and it is stated that as much as 100l. has been paid for an unusually fine example. According to Dr. P. L. Simmonds, between the years 1761 and 1764 ten thousand pounds' worth of Scotch pearls were sent to London, while in the corresponding decade of the present century the amount was considerably more than double that value. During the dry season of 1862, when the lowness of the streams-rendered the fishing unusually favourable, more pearls were collected than in any previous year; and the average price consequently fell to fifty shillings, or less. Twenty years ago, when from 5l. to 20l. was obtained for fine specimens, the general price was, however, much higher; and one Scotch pearl, for which forty guineas was given, is the property of the Queen.
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L., R. The Fresh-Water Pearls of America. Nature 60, 150–152 (1899). https://doi.org/10.1038/060150e0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/060150e0