Mad About Seashells
Collectors have long prized mollusks for their beautiful exteriors, but for scientists, it’s what inside that matters
- By Richard Conniff
- Photographs by Sean McCormick
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 5)
From a financial perspective, valuing shells over Dutch masters may rank among the dumbest purchases ever. There are only 30-some known Vermeer paintings on earth. But the scarcity that could make a shell seem so precious was almost always illusory. For instance, C. gloriamaris, a four-inch-long cone covered in a delicate fretwork of gold and black lines, was for centuries among the most coveted species in the world, known from only a few dozen specimens. One shell-trade story held that a wealthy collector who already owned a specimen managed to buy another at auction and, in the interest of scarcity, promptly crushed it underfoot. To maintain prices, collectors also spread the rumor that an earthquake had destroyed the species' habitat in the Philippines and rendered it extinct. Then in 1970, divers discovered the mother lode in the Pacific, north of Guadalcanal Island, and the value of C. gloriamaris plummeted. Today you can buy one for roughly the price of dinner for two at a nice restaurant. And paintings by Vermeer? The last time one came on the market, in 2004, it went for $30 million. (And it was a minor and slightly questionable one at that.)
But what seems common to us could seem breathtakingly rare to early collectors, and vice versa. Daniel Margocsy, a historian of science at Northwestern University, points out that Dutch artists produced five million or more paintings in the 17th century. Even Vermeers and Rembrandts could get lost in the glut, or lose value as fashions shifted. Beautiful shells from outside Europe, on the other hand, had to be collected or acquired by trade in distant countries, often at considerable risk, then transported long distances home on crowded ships, which had an alarming tendency to sink or go up in flames en route.
The shells that got through to Europe in the early years were mostly sold privately by sailors and civil administrators in the colonial trade. When Capt. James Cook returned from his second round-the-world voyage in 1775, for instance, a gunner's mate aboard the Resolution wrote offering shells to Sir Joseph Banks, who had served as naturalist for Cook's first circumnavigation a few years earlier.
"Begging pardon for my Boldness," the note began, in a tone of forelock-tugging class deference. "I take this opportunity for acquainting your Honour of our arrival. After a long and tedious Voyage...from many strange Isles I have procured your Honour a few curiosities as good as could be expected from a person of my capacity. Together with a small assortment of shells. Such as was esteem'd by pretended Judges of Shells." (The last line was a sly jibe at the lesser naturalists who had taken Banks' place on the second circumnavigation.) Dealers sometimes waited at the docks to vie for new shells from returning ships.
For many collectors of that era, shells were not just rare, but literally a gift from God. Such natural wonders "declare the skilful hand from which they come" and reveal "the excellent artisan of the Universe," wrote one 18th-century French connoisseur. The precious wentletrap, a pale white spiral enclosed by slender vertical ribs, proved to another collector that only God could have created such a "work of art."
Such declarations of faith enabled the wealthy to present their lavish collections as a way of glorifying God rather than themselves, writes British historian Emma Spary. The idea of gathering shells on the beach also conferred spiritual status (although few wealthy collectors actually did so themselves). It symbolized escape from the workaday world to recover a sense of spiritual repose, a tradition invoked by luminaries from Cicero to Newton.
In addition, many shells suggested the metaphor of climbing a spiral staircase and, with each step, coming closer to inner knowledge and to God. The departure of the animal from its shell also came to represent the passage of the human soul into eternal life. The nautilus, for instance, grows in a spiral, chamber upon chamber, each larger than the one before. Oliver Wendell Holmes made it the basis for one of the most popular poems of the 19th century, "The Chambered Nautilus": Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul, / As the swift seasons roll! /... Till thou at length art free, / Leaving thine outgrown shell by life's unresting sea!
Oddly, collectors didn't much care about the animals that actually built the shells. Holmes, for instance, unwittingly blended the characteristics of two separate nautilus species in his poem, according to shell historian Tucker Abbott: "It was as if he had written a poem about a graceful antelope who had the back half of a leopard and the habit of flying over the arctic ice." Collectors often cared passionately about new species, but mainly for the status of possessing something strange and unusual from a distant land, preferably before anybody else.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.
Related topics: Mollusks, Worms, Sponges, Starfish Collecting Medicine Water
Additional Sources
Shell Collecting: An Illustrated History by S. Peter Dance, University of California Press, 1966
"A Bit More on Sphaerocypraea incomparabilis," by Donald Dan, American Conchologist, September, 2008









Comments (15)
I have shell ancient shell. i have search the internet i have never see it. it was 50 year old and it healed sick people tell me what kind of shell i have?
Posted by Edgardo R. Ipanag on September 8,2012 | 06:18 AM
I have a nice collection of shells ,But i was told i might have one that might be worth some money its about 4ins long, and light brown in colour with dark markings . i heard one sold for a lot of money in the states is that true but i dont know the name of the shell.
Posted by steven deane on January 19,2012 | 06:13 AM
I HAVE SEASHELLS THAT'S BEEN IN MY FAMILY FOR OVER 50 YEARS. THEY CAME FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD.EACH SHELL HAS IT'S OWN PLACE IN A CASE. I ALSO HAVE A JAR OF STAR SAND. I WOULD LIKE TO SEE IF THEY ARE WORTH ANYTHING. IF SOMEONE CAN HELP ME THAT WOULD BE GREAT. I HAVE MANY COLORS.
SOME OF THEM HAVE NAME WITH. THATS ABOUT IT.
Posted by WILLIAM on November 6,2011 | 06:15 PM
Today I found a leopard spotted shell and a round brown w/black stripe shell completely sealed which floats and was wondering if these could have washed up from other countries on to Ormond by the Sea shore because of the hurricanes, I would like to know what kind of shells these might be. Thank-you much, Anne
Posted by Anne Carpenter on September 22,2010 | 11:17 PM
I live in Myrtle Beach SC and have lived here my whole life. I married a man from England so of course when his family visits we are always off to the beach. On one of our visits my mother-in-law noticed that there were black shells along the beach. She is convinced that it is a result of oil, as in pollution. I'm not convinced that this is the reason why some are black. They do not look as though they have any residual oil on them. I have looked and can not find out why this is. So I was wondering if someone could provide me with some information about why some shells on the beach are black, is it ever the result of pollution?
Posted by Nicole Farley on May 17,2010 | 10:03 AM
Does anybody know what sea / weather / chemical / bacteria condition would result in washed up sea shells that are normally white (e.g oyster) to be deep pure black? For the first time we can recall in 50+ years, we found pure black sea shells along the south coast of South Africa.
The shells seem to still have a white inner core, and the white shine through where the base of the mollusc was attached, but the rest seems coated probably a millimeter thick with black instead of white layers. This applies to the inside as well as outside of the shells.
Posted by Johan Buys on April 9,2010 | 09:51 AM
Great article, full of interesting stories, nicely written.
Posted by Susana Costa on November 5,2009 | 07:40 PM
Hello out there, if anyone see this message, do any of you know the history of displaying sea shells on wooden snake stands? Thank you, an'ya
Posted by an'ya on November 4,2009 | 02:04 PM
We loved the August 2009 issue of the Smithsonian mostly because of the fabulous article about shells, so many different species including rare ones are found in the Philippies, the country of our birth. We also appreciated the article and pictures of Herod's tomb, as we have toured the Middle East including Lebanon before, again Jordan and Israel in 2000, and last time Dec.2008-January 2009: Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Israel. My sister just in January 2009 visited Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, the Dead Sea, toured Masada & vicinity and sites in-between. The Smithsonian magazine is pricelss!
Posted by Diane C. Ebro on August 30,2009 | 07:36 PM
I'm surprised that Mr. Conniff didn't mention that Shell Oil, one of whose predecessors,Shell Transport and Trading, was actually started as an importer of goods from the Orient to England. Shells were a big component of those goods; hence founder Marcus Samuel's choice of the name.
Posted by Len Gillan on August 10,2009 | 03:54 PM
I love this article. i believe that I may see it soon in the Smithsonian Magazine to which I subscribe.
Thugh I'm not an orgaized clooector, I have always had more pleasure in strolling the beach collecting shells than swiming. I have filled boxes of them from every beach, ocean and sea that I have visited. Especially, from the Atlantic, the Caribean, the Pacific, the Baltic, the Mediterranean, the Aegean an some very small ones from fresh water picked at Lake Savan in Armenia. It is a wonderful hobby that carried me to even buy some beautiful ones - though not too expensive - at the stores. I wish I had the space and money to have display furniture for them. However, I have some in trays and shelves around the house. This allow me to enjoy their beauty whenever I have the time to see them in detail.
Thanks for offering such a great article about this beautiful work of nature.
Posted by Hector Moreno on August 7,2009 | 12:26 AM
OMG!I didnt know that a cone snail could harm you!
Posted by dlynne on August 7,2009 | 06:06 PM
I have a wide array of shells, but one that puzzles me the most is a cowrie shell with the Lord's Prayer etched into it in script. My mom got it from her mother's family who said it was from the Civil War time span! I wonder if anyone else has heard of or seen somthing like this??
Thank you! I really enjoyed the article!
Posted by Marlene Risney on August 7,2009 | 01:27 PM
Shells have amazed me from my infancy.
Since then I have not ceased to wonder on their colourful beauty, porcelain like quality, its lightness albeit strength to withstand forces at play and of course, the animal inside, in its curious and least known life attitude.
To wonder about their beautiful array and distributon of shades of colour, admire their compactedness, almost make me forget there is something alive inside that produces all this marvel.
We humans know more about the Solar System than we know about the depths of our oceans: this is nonsensical, indeed.
Shells and other bathos inhabitants are so near yet so far away from science's total uncompromised reach... another of our human contradictions...
Posted by Geraldo A. L.obato Franco on July 27,2009 | 10:31 PM