ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED1.]
† 1. gen. Vaulted, arched. Obs.
1666. J. Smith, Old Age (1676), 139. Of the same concamerated form.
1681. Grew, Musæum, I. 59. The upper Beak [of the Crowned Crow] an inch and 1/2 high, consisteth of one concamerated Bone, bended downwards, and Toothed as the other.
1755. Hodgson, in Phil. Trans., 359. A concamerated room.
2. Zool. Divided into chambers, as a chambered shell.
1746. Da Costa, in Phil. Trans., XLIV. 398. A Shell related to the Nautilus kind: It is concamerated. Ibid. (1754), XLVIII. 803. The nautilus is a concamerated shell.
1854. Woodward, Mollusca, II. 176. Pomatias shell slender operculum cartilaginous, concamerated within.