Clam
sand burrowing mollusc
bivalve
bivalve
No, it is found in every class of mollusc except the Bivalve.
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.
Clams belong to the animal kingdom, specifically the phylum Mollusca. They are bivalve mollusks, characterized by their two-part shell.
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.