The operculum (plural : opercula or operculums) of gastropods is a corneous plate at the opening of the shell, attached dorsally to the foot. This fingernail-like structure seals the aperture, serving as a cover against predators when the snail body is retracted. It also enables the snail to survive periods of drought.
The operculum has a concentric structure and a nucleus near the parietal margin (close to the umbilicus).
There are two types of operculum :
The first type consists of a thin to rather thick corneous material. This matter is supple, single layered, and circular to subcircular in shape.
The second type has a multi-layered structure, with a corneous base and a calcareous overlay which is sometimes carved with spiral structures and grooves.
The operculum sculpture helps us to tell apart and sort related groups (genera) of land operculates.
Pulmonates (lunged snails) lack an operculum, but have instead an epiphragm (a membranaceous or calcareous septum).
Gastropod: external link
Pictures of diverse gastropod opercula (http://www.nansaidh.us/operc/index1.html)
Fishes
The operculum in fishes is the hard bony flap covering the gills.
Botany
a flap of the spore-bearing sporangium of a moss, covering the peristome (appendages surrounding the mouth of a moss capsule)
the covering of a pyxidium (capsule whose upper part falls off when the seeds are released) of a plant, such as the plantain.
Brain
The operculum is part of the inferior frontal gyrus of the frontal hemisphere. One infamous part of the operculum is Broca's area which plays an important role in speech production.
Opercula do not stay attached to their parent shell for long after the shellfish has died suggesting that the shellfish was highly likely to have been alive when it was brought to the site.
The presence of the opercula suggests that the shellfish and opercula were removed from the shell within the cave.
The presence of opercula in the deposit also reduces the likelihood of 'old shell' being brought to the cave with the first human inhabits.
731– The insula of the left side, exposed by removing the opercula.
It lies deep to the brain's lateral surface, within the lateral sulcus which separates the temporal lobe and inferior parietal cortex.
These overlying cortical areas are known as opercula (meaning "lids"), and parts of the frontal, temporal and parietal lobes form opercula over the insula.