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LEPTODECORHOMBES

Volume 9 · 174 words · 1797 Edition

in natural history, a genus of fossils of the order of the feline; consisting of 10 planes, each so nearly equal to that opposite to it as very much to approach to a decahedral parallelopiped, though never truly or regularly so.

Of this genus there are only five known species. 1. A thin, fine, pellucid, and slender-streaked one, with transverse striae, found in considerable quantities in the strata of clay in most parts of England, particularly near Hedington in Oxfordshire. 2. A thin, dull-looking, opaque, and slender-streaked one, more scarce than the former, and found principally in Leicestershire and Staffordshire. 3. A thin fine-streaked one, with longitudinal striae, found in the clay pits at Richmond, and generally lying at great depths. This has often on its top and bottom a very elegant smaller rhomboide, described by four regular lines. 4. A rough kind, with thick transverse striae, and a scabrous surface, very common in Leicestershire and Yorkshire. And, 5. A very short kind, with thick plates, common in the clay-pits of Northamptonshire and Yorkshire.