some common mulloscs are under the following classes: Gastropoda (slugs and snails, ex. European black slug: Arion ater, Giant African Land snail: Achatina fulicula, North American sea hare: Aplysia punctata), Bivalvia (oysters and claims, ex. giant clam: Tridacna gigas, mussels: (ex) Mytilus edulis, Atlantic Saddle Oyster: Anomia ephippium), Polyplacophora (Chitons, ex. North Atlantic chiton: Tonicella Marmorea), and Cephalopoda (otopuses, squid, cuttlefish, nautiluses, ex. Pacific squid: Loligo opalescens, Blue-Ringed Octopus: Hapalochlaena lunulata, Pearly Nautilus: Nautilus pompilius). The lesser known classes of molluscs are Aplacophora, Monoplacophora, and Scaphopoda (tusk shells)
Curium has seven electron shells.
Yttrium has five electron shells.
Mercury has 80 electrons which means there are 6 shells in a neutral atom of mercury.
There are many different types of shells The main ones are bourne shells, tc shells, korn shells These are the types you would usually find at the sea side or on a english or eurepean beach. Thanks I hope this helps and is the right explanation
Magnesium has three electron shells. The electron configuration is 2,8,2
The number of shells varies. The row number of the element is the number of shells. They don't really have names, but they're referred to by how many levels they are away from the nucleus.
Barnacle
Johnstone's Junonia (Scaphella juonia johnstoneae).
there is such a name called olive for a shell there is a shell called a wrench
YES! i strongly recomend you try this as it is very amusing.
Giant clam shells can be purchased from specialist suppliers. A couple of names of companies dealing in such items include Sea Shell World and Shell Horizons.
Ruth Lippincott Walworth has written: 'Shellcraft, explaining the making of ornamental and utilitarian objects from shells, and giving the scientific names' -- subject(s): Handicraft, Shells
The collective nouns for shells are:a broadside of shells (artillery)a salvo of shells (artillery)a midden of shells (sea)
Shells are not named "Hebrew." They are named "Shells."
snails shed their shells and find new shells
there not ment for shells
Paper nautilus, conch shell, whelk shells, british pearl shells, and scallop shells. :)