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  1. A cockle is an edible marine bivalve mollusc. Although many small edible bivalves are loosely called cockles, true cockles are species in the family Cardiidae. [2] True cockles live in sandy, sheltered beaches throughout the world. The distinctive rounded shells are bilaterally symmetrical, and are heart -shaped when viewed from the end.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BivalviaBivalvia - Wikipedia

    Empty shell of the giant clam. ( Tridacna gigas) Empty shells of the sword razor. ( Ensis ensis) Bivalvia ( / baɪˈvælviə / ), in previous centuries referred to as the Lamellibranchiata and Pelecypoda, is a class of marine and freshwater molluscs that have laterally compressed bodies enclosed by a shell consisting of two hinged parts.

  3. Mar 22, 2017 · Consider the cockle. The pint-sized bivalve is 100 percent sweet, tender meat with none of the overwhelming brininess that turns people off from other shellfish. Even if seafood isn’t totally ...

  4. Death of Cook is the name of several paintings depicting the 1779 death of the first European visitor to the Hawaiian Islands, Captain James Cook at Kealakekua Bay.

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  6. Cerastoderma nunninkae Lucas, 1984. The common cockle ( Cerastoderma edule) is a species of edible saltwater clam, a marine bivalve mollusc in the family Cardiidae, the cockles. It is found in waters off Europe, from Iceland in the north, south into waters off western Africa as far south as Senegal. The ribbed oval shells can reach 6 ...

  7. Death of Captain Cook. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Most paintings of the scene leads us to believe that Cook was trying to calm the islanders, and that image of Cook, became the authorised version of his death, as described in the official accounts of the voyage by Lieutenant James King, who succeeded him as captain, and ...

  8. cockle, any of the approximately 250 species of marine bivalve mollusks, or clams, of the family Cardiidae. Distributed worldwide, they range from about one centimetre (0.4 inch) in diameter to about 15 centimetres (about 6 inches)—the size of the smooth giant cockle ( Laevicardium elatum) of California. The two valves of the shell are equal ...

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