The 
                        Lobster is a large marine CRUSTACEAN with five pairs of 
                        jointed legs, the first pair bearing large pincerlike 
                        claws of equal size adapted for crushing the shells of 
                        its prey.
                      The 
                        dark-green common American lobster (Homarus americanus) 
                        is found from Labrador to North Carolina, but especially 
                        along the New England coast. When the lobster is cooked, 
                        the shell turns bright red; the meat is considered a delicacy.
                        
                        
                        
                      Long 
                        ago, lobsters were so plentiful that Native Americans 
                        used them to fertilize their fields and to bait their 
                        hooks for fishing. In colonial times, lobsters were considered 
                        "poverty food." They were harvested from tidal pools and 
                        served to children, to prisoners, and to indentured servants, 
                        who exchanged their passage to America for seven years 
                        of service to their sponsors. In Massachusetts, some of 
                        the servants finally rebelled. They had it put into their 
                        contracts that they would not be forced to eat lobster 
                        more than three times a week.