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Date: | Fri, 24 Sep 1999 20:37:35 +0300 |
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Dear Amy and Conch-L's,
The Conch originally came from the ancient Greek conchylion (in modern Greek
conchyli) that means shell as in Xenophora Conchyliophora (phora in Greek
means carrier and xeno means strange).
In Greece the fishermen use from many years the Triton shell as trumpet.
Best regards.
George
Amy Lyn Edwards wrote:
> Below is a question I received this morning - I was wondering if some of
> our list members would like to try their hand at answering a mollusc
> related question.
> Amy
>
> >From: [log in to unmask]
> >Date: Thu, 23 Sep 1999 23:27:32 EDT
> >Subject: I need help!
> >To: [log in to unmask]
> >MIME-Version: 1.0
> >
> > Hi! could you please tell me where the word conch originally came from?
> > and how it was used exactly? please?
> > thank you
> > sincerely,
> > Ash
> >
>
> Amy Edwards, Program Coordinator ------ [log in to unmask]
>
> Georgia Museum of Natural History -------- phone (706) 542-4137
> University of Georgia -------- FAX 706-542-3920
> Athens, GA 30602-1882 -------- http://museum.nhm.uga.edu/
> -------------------------------------------------------------------
> "A man's mind, stretched by new ideas, can never go back to its original
> dimensions." Oliver Wendell Holmes
--
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George Sangiouloglou http://www.geocities.com/~sangioul/
Xenofondos 40 http://members.xoom.com/sangioul/
Voula 16673 Phone +30 1 8955241 9659956
Athens Greece Modem-Fax +30 1 8954507
mailto:[log in to unmask]
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