Online Encyclopedia

BARNACLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 409 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BARNACLE  , a name applied to

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Crustacea of the division Cirripedia or
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Thyrostraca . Originally, the name was given to the stalked barnacles (Lepadidae of C . Darwin), which attach themselves in
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great numbers to drift-wood and other
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objects floating in the sea and are one of the chief agents in the fouling of
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ships' bottoms during long voyages . The sessile barnacles (Balanidae of Darwin) or "
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acorn-shells " are found in myriads, encrusting the rocks between tide-marks on all coasts . One of 409 the most extraordinary and persistent myths of
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medieval natural
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history, dating back to the 12th century at least, was the cause of transferring to these organisms the name of the barnack or bernacle goose (Bernicla branta) . This
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bird is a winter visitor to Britain, and its Arctic nesting-places being then unknown, it was fabled to originate within the shell-like fruit of a tree growing by the sea-
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shore . In some variants of the story this shell is said to grow as, a kind of
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mushroom on rotting
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timber in the sea, and is obviously one of the barnacles of the genus Lepas . Even after 1 . Scalpellum rostratum, Darwin,
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sponges, New South Wales; Philippine Islands . (4'), tergum; (4"), Scutum . 2 . Pollicipes cornucopiae, Leach, 5 .

Balanus tintinnabulum, Linn.,

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European seas .
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Atlantic . 3 . Tubicinella trachealis, Shaw, 5' . Section of Balanus, Linn. attached to whales . 6 . Coronula diadema, Linn., at- 4 . Acasta sulcata, Lamk., in tached to whales . the scientific study of zoology had replaced the fabulous tales of medieval writers, it was a long time before the true
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affinities of the barnacles were appreciated, and they were at first classed with the
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Mollusca, some of which they closely resemble in
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external appearance . It was not till Vaughan Thompson demonstrated, in 183o, their development from a
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free-swimming and typically Crustacean larva that it came to be recognized that, in Huxley's graphic phrase, " a barnacle may be said to be a Crustacean fixed by its head and kicking the food into its mouth with its legs." For a systematic account of the barnacles and their allies, see the article THYROSTRACA .

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