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te Etruscan art the bracelet may be formed of consecutive panels, as often in modern jewelry. [Illustration: From La Grande Encydopedie. FIG. 3.--Etruscan Bracelet, Louvre.] The spiral forms were common in the Iron Age of northern Europe, while silver bracelets of great elegance, formed of plaited and intertwisted strands of silver wire, and plain penannular hoops, round or lozenge-shaped in section and tapering to the extremities, became common towards the close of the pagan period. The late Celtic period in Britain was characterized by serpent-shaped bracelets and massive armlets, with projecting ornaments of solid bronze and perforations filled with enamel. In the middle ages bracelets were much less commonly used in Europe, but the custom has continued, to prevail among Eastern nations to the present time, and many of the types that were common in Europe in prehistoric times are still worn in central Asia. A treatise, _De Armillis Veterum_, by Thomas Bartholinus, was published at Amsterdam in 1676. BRACHIOPODA, an important and well-defined but extremely isolated class of invertebrates. The group may be defined as follows: Sessile solitary _Coelomata_ with bivalved shells usually of unequal size and arranged dorso-ventrally. The head is produced into ciliated arms bearing tentacles. They reproduce sexually, and with doubtful exceptions are of separate sexes. The name Brachiopod ([Greek: brachion], an arm, and [Greek: pous, podos], a foot) was proposed for the class by F. Cuvier in 1805, and by A.M.C. Dumeril in 1809, and has since been very extensively adopted. The division of the group into _Ecardines_ (_Inarticulata_), with no hinge to the shell and with an alimentary canal open at both ends, and _Testicardines_ (_Articulata_), with a hinge between the dorsal and ventral valves and with no anus, was proposed by Owen and has been adopted by nearly all authors. In a later scheme based on our increased knowledge of fossil forms, the Brachiopoda are divided into four primary groups (orders). This is given at the end of the article, but it must not be forgotten that the existing forms with an anus (Ecardines) differ markedly from the aproctous members of the group (Testicardines). [Illustration: Figs. 1-11.--Various forms of Brachiopoda. 1. _Magellania [Waldheimia] cranium_. A, ventral, B, dorsal valve. 2. _Rhynchonella (Hemithyris) psittacea_. 3. and 4. _Thecidea_. 5. _Spirif
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