Illinois Resident Finds Giant Tun Shell
Publication Date: December 22, 2009
For 38 years, Rob Meyer and his family have walked the same stretch of beach along
“I first visited the Museum the year it opened. It was fun to come back and share this with my children and see how things have changed,” said Meyer. He was thrilled to find out that his mystery shell was Tonna galea (Linnaeus, 1758), or giant tun. The word tun means cask shell or wine jar. This gastropod is found in the deeper waters of the Caribbean and
According to Dr. José H. Leal, the director of The Bailey-Matthews Shell Museum, “This snail produces babies that live for a long time in the larval stage, drifting in the water. This phenomenon allows babies to be transported to places that are distant from where their parents generally live. Is not unusual to find them on shores where they haven’t been found before. I’m always thrilled when shellers race to the museum to learn more about the unusual shells they find,” stated Dr. Leal.
