sand burrowing mollusc
bivalve
No, it is found in every class of mollusc except the Bivalve.
bivalve
Mussels are a member of bivalve molluscs - not classed as crustaceans.
A whelk is a snail and a mussel is a bivalve mollusc or clam.
Neither. A scallop isn't a mammal or even a vertebrate. It is a bivalve mollusc.
Tennessee has a state fossil - the bivalve mollusc, Pterotrigonia thoracica. It is from the Late Cretaceous.
Cockatoos are birds and, like all birds, they are vertebrates because they have a spine and spinal cord, and an internal skeleton. They belong to the Phylum Chordata. Mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians are all vertebrates.
The pipi is a burrowing bivalve shellfish (paphies Australis) that is common in coastal areas right around New Zealand and is a traditional food of Maori. They are easiest to find buried just below the surface of mud or sand in tidal estuaries at low tide.
The shell of a cockle is formed from calcium carbonate, so is inorganic (non-living). The cockle is a small, edible, marine bivalve mollusc.
There are several different orders, families, geniuses, and species of clams. They belong to the kingdom Animalia, phylum Mollusca, and class bivalvia.