The Ancient Life History of the Earth eBook

Henry Alleyne Nicholson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 483 pages of information about The Ancient Life History of the Earth.

The Ancient Life History of the Earth eBook

Henry Alleyne Nicholson
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 483 pages of information about The Ancient Life History of the Earth.
structureless animal substance of an albuminous nature ("sarcode"), of a gelatinous consistence, transparent, and exhibiting numerous minute granules or rounded particles.  The body-substance cannot be said in itself to possess any definite form, except in so far as it may be bounded by a shell; but it has the power, wherever it may be exposed, of emitting long thread-like filaments ("pseudopodia"), which interlace with one another to form a network (fig. 25, b).  These filaments can be thrown out at will, and to considerable distances, and can be again retracted into the soft mass of the general body-substance, and they are the agents by which the animal obtains its food.  The soft bodies of the Foraminifera are protected by a shell, which is usually calcareous, but may be composed of sand-grains cemented together; and it may consist of a single chamber (fig. 26, a), or of many chambers arranged in different ways (fig. 26, b-f).  Sometimes the shell has but one large opening into it—­the mouth; and then it is from this aperture that the animal protrudes the delicate net of filaments with which it seeks its food.  In other cases the entire shell is perforated with minute pores (fig. 26, e), through which the soft body-substance gains the exterior, covering the whole shell with a gelatinous film of animal matter, from which filaments can be emitted at any point.  When the shell consists of many chambers, all of these are placed in direct communication with one another, and the actual substance of the shell is often traversed by minute canals filled with living matter (e.g., in Calcarina and Nummulina).  The shell, therefore, may be regarded, in such cases, as a more or less completely porous calcareous structure, filled to its minutest internal recesses with the substance of the living animal, and covered externally with a layer of the same substance, giving off a network of interlacing filaments.

[Illustration:  Fig. 25.—­The animal of Nonionina, one of the Foraminifera, after the shell has been removed by a weak acid; b, Gromia, a single-chambered Foraminifer (after Schultze), showing the shell surrounded by a network of filaments derived from the body substance.]

[Illustration:  Fig 26.—­Shells of living Foraminifera. a, Orbulina universa, in its perfect condition, showing the tubular spines which radiate from the surface of the shell; b, Globigerina bulloides, in its ordinary condition, the thin hollow spines which are attached to the shell when perfect having been broken off; c, Textularia variabilis; d, Peneroplis planatus; e, Rotalia concamerata; f, Cristellaria subarcuatula. [Fig. a is after Wyville Thomson; the others are after Williamson.  All the figures are greatly enlarged.]]

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The Ancient Life History of the Earth from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.