THE NAUTILUS A MONTHLY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF CONCHOLOGISTS VOL. XXI. MAY, 1007, to APRIL, 1OO8. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS : H. A. PII.SBRY, Curator of the Department of Mollusca, Academy of Natural Sciences, PHILADELPHIA. C. W. JOHNSON, Curator of the Boston Society of Natural History, BOSTON. INDEX TO THE NAUTILUS, VOL. XXI. INDEX TO SUBJECTS, GENERA AND SPECIES. Acmsea alveus Conrad ..... Acmaea testudinalis Mull. ...... 1 Acmsea, New England species of, (PI. II) . . 1, 24 Acuminia Dall, n. subgen. of Terebra . . . 124, 125 Aclelopoma stolli Martens . . . . . . .78 Alabama, Eocene fossils from ...... 8 Alaska, U. S. Coast Survey Expedition in the year 1867 . 29 Ampullaria, the origin of the lung . . . . .11 Ancey collection of shells . . . 59 Anculosse, On certain immature . . . . . .110 Anculosa praerosa Say (PI. X, figs. 1-6) . . . .111 Anculosa subglobosa Say (PI. X, figs. 9-11) . . .114 Anculosa tintinnabulum Lea. (PI. X, figs. 7-8) . . . 115 Ancylidae, New species of (PL IX) .... 126,136 Ancylus hemisphsericus Walker, n. sp. (PL IX, figs. 14-16). 140 Ancylus hendersoni Walker, n. sp. (PI. IX, figs. 8-10) . 138 Ancylus hinkleyi Walker, n. sp. (PI. IX, figs. 11-13) . . 139 Ancylus novanglise Walker, n. sp. (PL IX, figs. 5-7) . . 138 Anodon moretonianus Sowb. ...... 50 Ashmunella rhyssa hyporhyssa Ckll. . . . . .11 Australian Unionidae, Notes on . . . . . .118 (iii) IV THE NAUTILUS. Bela grippi Dall, n. sp. . . . . . . . 137 California, Molluscan fauna of Monterey Bay . 17,34,39,51 Mollnscan faunaof the San Bernardino Mountains 121 Mollusca found in the vicinity of La Jolla (PI. VII) . . . .55, 65, 92,106 Cancellaria obtusa Desh. . . . . . . .105 Cape Cod notes ......... 74 Cecilioides jod Pils., n. sp. . . . . . . .28 Cephalopods, Among the ....... 23 Cerithiopsis regularoides Aldrich, n. sp. (PI. I, fig. 7) . 9 Cerithium stantoni Dall n. sp. . 22 Cochliopa riograndensis Pils. & Ferriss . . . .79 Coelostele in Mexico , . . . . . . .77 Colorado, A new zonitoid shell from the Miocene, Florissant 89 Conchological Society, Proposals for . . . . .94 Cyclas similis Say ........ 33 Cymatium corrugatum var. tremperi Dall, n. var. . . 85 Cyprsea coxeni Cox, Note on . . . . .36 Cytherea petechialis of Carpenter's Mazatlan Catalogue . 29 Davis, Charles Abbott (obituary) . . . . .131 Dayton, Charles Austin (obituary) . . . . .93 Diplodon angasii Lea. . . . . . . .118 Diplodon bednalli Tate 118 Drymaeus multilineatus Say ...... 72 Duplicaria Dall, n. gen. ...... 124, 125 Euglandina texasiana Pfr. ....... 77 Euglandina truncata Gmel. ...... 7 Eocene fossils from Alabama ...... 8 Fissurella unilineata Aldrich, n. sp. (PI. I, fig. 10) . .11 Florida, A list of the land shells of Lee County . . .99 Florida Keys, A new Cerithium from the . . . .22 Fluminicola minutissima Pils., n. sp. (PI. IX, fig. 4) . 76, 133 Gundlachia stimpsoniana Smith (PI. IV) ... 14, 15 Hastula 124 Heilprin, Angelo (obituary) ...... 60 Helicodiscus lineatus, Eyes of . . . . .73 Helix hortensis 6,91,130 Holospira hinkleyi Pils., n. sp. (PI. Ill, fig. 34) . . .27 Hygromia hispida in Maine ...... 109 THE HAUTILUS. V Ilyanassa obsoleta iu San Francisco Bay . . . .91 Lampsilis fimbriata Frierson, n. sp. . . . . . 86 Littorina nebulosa Lam. var. columellaris Orb. . . .71 Lymnaea jacksonensis Baker, n. sp. . . . . 52 Lymneea pseudopinguis Baker, n. sp. . . . . .54 Maine, Shells of the Lake region of . . . . 106 Mollusks of North Haven ..... 142 Pulmonates of the Manticus Is. . . . .5 Marginella apiciua Menke, Sinistral . . . . .91 Mathilda elongatoides Aldrich, n. sp. (PI. I, fig. 6) .10 Mathilda leona Aldrich, n. sp. (PL I, figs. 4, 5) . . .10 Mathilda singularis Aldrich, n. sp. (PI. I, fig. 11) . .10 Matinicus Islands, Maine pulmonates of the ... 5 Mexican shells, Description of New . . . 25, 36, 38, 86 Mexico, Shell-collecting in Northeastern . . . 68, 76 Micrarionta desertorum Pils. and Ferr., n. sp. (PI. IX, figs. 6-10 134 Milax gagates in Colorado ....... 131 Murex carpenter! var. alba Berry, n. var. . . . .105 Neoplanorbis carinatus Walker, n. sp. (PI. IX, figs 17, 18) . 127 Neoplanorbis smithii Walker, n. sp. (PL IX, figs. 1,2) . 126 Neoplanorbis tantillus Pils. . . . . . 126, 129 Neoplanorbis umbilicatus Walker, n. sp. (PL IX, figs. 3, 4). 126 New York, A collecting trip at Northport . . . .98 North Carolina, A new Polygyra from . . . .13 Oysters are wild animals ....... 47 Pachycheilus vallesensis Hinkley, n. sp. (PL V, figs. 1-10) . 25 Paludestrina tampicoensis Pilsbry & Hinkley n. sp. (PL Y, fig. 13) 39 Paphia staminea Conr. . . . . . . .141 Pelseneer's treatise on Mollusca ...... 80 Pennsylvania, Notes on the conchology of Pocono Manor ' 67 Perirhoe Dall, nov. section of Terebra . . . 124, 125 Planorbis magnificus Pils. ....... 90 Planorbis multivolvis Case (PL YIII) 62 Polygyra aulacomphala Pils. & Hinkley n. sp. (PL Y, fig. 12) . . 38 Polygyra hopetouensis Shuttlw. ...... 7 Polygyra martensiana Pils. n. sp. (PL XI, figs. 1-3) . 26, 133 VI THE NAUTILUS. Polygyra multilineata chadwicki Ferriss, n. var. . . 37 Polygyra polita Pilsbry & Hinkley n. sp. (PI. V, tig. 11) . 38 Polygyra soelneri Henderson, n. sp. (PI. Ill, tigs. 1,2) ' 13 Pomatiopsis robusta Walker, n. sp. . . . . 97 Publications received . . . .23, 36, 48, 72, 119, 132 Pyrgulopsis wabashensis Hinkley n. sp. . . . .117 Rissoa grippiana Dall, n. sp. . . . . . 136 Rhode Island, Additions to the shell-bearing mollusca . 47 Rous, Sloman (obituary) ...... 72, 84 Say's early writings and species, A few notes on 31 Scala dolosa Aldrich, n. sp. (PI. I, tig. 13) . . . .11 Scala vetusta Aldrich, n. sp. (PL I, tig. 9) . . . .10 Spineoterebra Sacco . . . . . . .125 Spiraxis tarnpicoensis Pils. (PL III, fig. 5) . . . 28, 77 Stearns, Frederick (obituary) ...... 83 Succinea ovalis Say ........ 32 Terebratulina brundidgensis Aldrich, n. sp.(Pl. I, figs. 1,2,3) 8 Terebridae, Subdivisions of the ...... 124 Tresus nuttalli Conr. . . . . . . . .141 Triplostephanus Dall, nov. section of Terebra . . 124, 125 Triton gibbosus Brod. in California ..... 106 Tritogonia tuberculata with ova 48 Trivia pilula Kiener, Note on . . . . .59 Turbonilla anita Aldrich, n. sp. (PL I, fig. 2) . .9 Turbonilla castanea Dall & Bartsch, preocc.=T. castanella Dall, n. n., 131 Turbonilla harrisi Aldrich, n. sp. (PL I, fig. 8) . . . 9 Unio angasii Lea . . . . . . . .118 Unio bednalli Tate . . . . . . . .118 Unio crassus Say ........ 32 Unio gigas (Swains.) Sby. (U. cumiugii Lea.) . . .49 Unio ochraceus ......... 33 Unio plicatus Say ........ 33 Unio plicatulus Lea. ........ 50 Unio popei Lea. . . . . . . . . .79 Unios, The gravid periods of . . . . .87 Unionidae, Notes on Australian . . . . . .118 Unionidse, Notes on exotic (PL VI) . . . . .49 Vendryes, Henry (obituary) ...... 107 THE NAUTILUS. Vll Vertigo occidentalis Sterki, n. sp. (PL XI, fig. 5) . 90, 133 Vitrea alliaria ......... 131 Vitrea cellaria in Colorado 131 Vitrea cellaria var. margaritacea Schmidt . . . .131 Vitrea dalliana Simpson (figured) . . . . .129 Vitrea fagalis Cockerell, n. sp. (miocene) . . . .89 Vitrea lewisiana Clapp, n. sp. (figured) . . . .129 Vitrea lucida in Colorado . . . . . . .131 Yemassee, South Carolina, Land and fresh-water shells of . 7 Zonitoides elegantula Pfr. . . . . . . .77 Zonitoides pentagyra Pils., n. sp. (PI. Ill, figs. 6-8) . . 28 INDEX TO AUTHORS. Aldrich, T. H. 8 Baily, Jr., Joshua L. 67,92 Baker, Frank Collins 52 Berry, S. S. . . 17, 34, 39, 51, 105, 121 Brooks, W. K 11 Button, Fred L 36, 59 Carpenter, H. T 47 Clapp, Geo. H 91, 129 Cockerell, T. D. A 89, 106, 131 Conner, Charles H. ... . .87 Dall, W. H 22,85,90,91,107.124,131,136 Ferriss, Jas. H. . 37, 134 Frierson, L. S 49, 86, 118 Gratacap, L. P. .... . .84 Henderson, John B 7, 13, 107 Hinkley, Anson A. 25, 38, 68, 76, 117 Jackson, Jr., Henry .... 1, 24, 142 Johnson, C. W 106, 119, 120, 130 Lermond, N. W. . .... .106 Morse, Edward S. . .73 Norton, Arthur H. ..... 5 Pilsbry, Henry A. . 26, 38, 75, 132, 133, 134 Rous, Sloman . 105 Smith, Maxwell 55, 65, 106 Stearns, R. E. C 23, 29, 141 Sterki, V. . . 31, 48, 80, 90 Yanatta, E. G -99 Walker, Bryant . . 14, 61, 97, 110, 126, 138 Weeks, Jr., Wm. H . .98 Wheat, Silas C -93 Winkley, Henry W. . .74 ( viii ) THE NAUTILUS. Voi,. XXI. MAY, 1907. No. 1. THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE TWO NEW ENGLAND SPECIES OF ACMAEA. BY HENRY JACKSON, JR. During the summer of 1906, at North Haven, Penobscot Bay, Maine, I collected about fifteen specimens of Acmaea testudinalis (Miiller) and thirty Acmaea alveus (Conrad), alveus being by far the more common. I put A. alveus here as a species rather than a var- iety of A. testudinalis, in accordance with one of the latest lists of New England mollusks which gives Conrad's species alveus specific rank. From this material I procured the radulas with the intention of studying the differences between the species testudinalis and alveus, The shell in testudinalis is a roundish and as a rule regular shell, there not being so much variation in form as in alveus. The shell of alveus is a narrower, laterally more compressed shell than that of testudinalis, and is found on eel grass, wharf piles and occasionally on rocks, but at North Haven it is most commonly found on eel grass which grows in great profusion, much to the disadvantage of boats and boatmen, all along the muddy shores. A. testudinalis is com- monly found on flat stones between tide marks. The coloring of tes- tudinalis, as far as observed at North Haven, has much less variation than that of the form alveus, which runs from nearly white to dark, blackish-brown, with many intermediate shades. This narrow, com- pressed form of alveus, it would seem, might have been caused by its being on eel grass which has narrow leaves and might cause a shell to be narrow by the lack of space to grow on. But Mr. Blaney has found alveus at Iron Bound Island, Frenchman's Bay, Maine, THE NAUTILUS. on the under side of stones on a coarse, pebbly beach, and here it still retained its characteristic, long, narrow form. See Proceedings of Boston Society of National History, Vol. 32, No. 2, Nov., 1904. All the illustrations here are of the same magnification. In the fifteen specimens of Acmaea testudinalis collected and studied the radulas were all the same with no observed variation, see PI. II, Fig. 1. All had two central (C C), two lateral (L L), and two outermost teeth (U U), while among the thirty A. alveus were several abnormal radulas, in all of which abnormal cases there were three teeth in the center, PI. II, Fig. 4, instead of two, PI. II, Fig. 2, which is the normal number for alveus. The additional or third tooth (A), see PI. II, Fig. 4, is on the left side and is a narrower tooth than the other two (C C). These abnormal radulas came from three very different individuals : one from a large, blackish, distorted shell, an adult, and one from a small, regular, white specimen of the nepionic age, and so on, all being different. There are several differences between the radulas of testudinalis and of alveus, and these differences were constant throughout the speci- mens examined. FIG. 5. Fio. 6. Fig. 5 (in text). Acmaea testudinalis (Miill). Normal adult rad- ula. Developing teeth of the posterior portion of the same radula as Fig. 1. Lettering the same. Fig. 6 (in text). Portion of anterior part of radula of Acmaea te»- tudinalis, showing small bases (B), proximal portion of cusp (P C), THE NAUTILUS. O where the rest has been broken off, and plates (P) on lingual mem- brane (L M). U, outermost; L, lateral; C, central teeth. R, turned over part of plate. B, base. There is a distinct dip in the proximal portion of the cusp of testu- dinalis in the laterals : this does not appear in alveus. In testudinalis the bases project from the proximal portion of the cusp at an obtuse angle, while in alveus the proximal portion of the cusp is the same size as the adjoining portion of the base. In testudinalis, PI. II, Fig. 1, the apex of the cusp is just inside of the letter (L), from here it slopes down to the base ; while in PI. II, Fig. 2, alveus, the apex of the cusp runs the whole length of the foremost line border- ing the shaded portion. In testudinalis the lateral teeth form a letter v, while in alveus they form an inverted v, thus A. In alveus the laterals are less underneath the centrals than in testudinalis. The teeth of testudinalis are sharply rounded at the apex of the cusp, while those of alveus are nearly square, PI. II, Fig. 2, and the younger, undeveloped teeth of the radula of an adult shell of alveus are perhaps the squarest of all, PI. II, Fig. 4. This figure is of the developing teeth of the posterior portion of the same radula as PL II, Fig. 2. That is that portion hidden within the throat which will later come forward to take the place of worn-out teeth. I thought of the various causes of these differences, but it could not be in- dividual variation, because the differences were constant throughout the forty-five specimens examined. It could not be because the teeth were worn square, as the squarest of them in alveus are in the early, developing part of the radula and before they had been used at all, see PI. II, Fig. 3. There were five less important differences between the radulas of testudinalis and of alveus, these are : First the outermost tooth (U) is, in alveus, larger in proportion to the lateral tooth (L) than the outermost tooth of testudinalis is to its lateral tooth (L). In both species this little outside tooth (U) is nearly at right angles to the next tooth and the cusp of U faces in center of the lingual membrane (L), also it is very close to it, and at first glance appears to be the same tooth, only being a cusp of the larger denticle, but when viewed in a sideways, sectional view it is seen to be distinct. In the species testudinalis the tooth (U) cannot take much part in cutting food as it so much underlies the larger tooth (L), but in alveus, where it is more outstretched, it may do a good deal of work. Secondly, in A. testudinalis the cusps and bases alternate 4 THE NAUTILUS. large and small, see PI. II, Fig. 1, that is, the base of the centrals (C C) being large and the cusps small ; whereas in the laterals (L L) the bases are very small and the cusps large. The teeth in both species are set on separate plates, two on each plate. These plates are arranged in two rows, one down each side of the lingual mem- brane. The divisions between these separate plates are not distinct in the developing portion of the radula, but the plates seem to wrinkle with age, and in the center of the radula an elongated oval space is seen between the two. The first two or three rows of teeth in A. testudinalis are slightly blunter than those behind, but by no means so blunt as in A. alveus. What I mean by first teeth are those teeth in the anterior portion of the radula, these teeth are replaced by new ones which come forward from the developing portion. Fig. 6, drawn by the author, showing plates and proximal portion of cusps in A. testudinalis where the rest is broken of. Again the cusps of the teeth of testudinalis are very much more slanting backward or posteriorly than those of alveus^ especially the laterals (L L). Lastly, the cusps of testudinalis are minutely granu- lated, while those of alveus are indistinctly striated. This was seen in some cusps broken off their bases, placed on a separate slide and viewed with a one-sixth inch objective. In summing this matter up, one might say without much doubt that these two shells were distinct species. Also one may say that both radulas are exceedingly strange. They have no central tooth speaking strictly, as, with the exception of the abnormal radula of A. alveuS) all radulas had an even number of teeth. Their deep chestnut color is another curious feature. Also they are very hard radulas to draw as they are raised more than most teeth and the angles and focuses are hard to get. My thanks are due to Mr. R. T. Jackson, of Cambridge, and to Mr. J. A. Cushman, of the Boston Society of Natural History, for drawings of the radula. EXPLANATION OF PLATE AND FIGURES. Fig. 1. Acmaea testudinalis (Mull). Normal adult radula. L, lateral; C, central; U, outermost teeth. The cusps are shaded. Fig. 2. Acmaea alveus (Conrad). Normal radula. Lettering the •same as before. The outermost teeth (U) are so close to the laterals (1) that in this view they seem to be joined. THE NAUTILUS. 0 Fig. 3. Acmaea alveus (Conrad). Normal radula. Developing teeth of the posterior portion of the same radula as Fig. 2. These teeth have little or no coloring. Lettering the same. Fig. 4. Acmaea alveus (Conrad). Abnormal radula. L, lateral ; C, central ; U, outermost ; A, additional teeth. PULMONATE8 OF THE MATINICU8 ISLANDS, MAINE. ARTHUR H. NORTON. The Matinicus Islands form a group of off-shore islands outside of Penobscot Bay. They constitute the most isolated land mass of any size in the state, their nearest point of approach to the mainland being thirteen nautical miles. In the group there are eight islands, seven dry and numerous half-tide and sunken ledges. The total acreage I have roughly estimated at about fifteen hundred acres. Matinicus is the largest of the group, containing about eight hun- dred acres. It is quite well wooded and diversified in topographical features. Exploration of this island would doubtless increase the following list materially. Seal Island lies six miles east of Matinicus harbor, and Matinicus Rock five miles south of the harbor, both forming isolated points of great exposure and long separation. Several plants are found in abundance on these two points which are nowhere else abundant on this coast west of Petit-Menan point. Both are destitute of trees. As would be expected from their long isolation and great exposure, they are completely " rock bound," in fact, enormous ledges, with their valleys and seams filled with soil, which is partly coarse gravel, deeply overlaid with decayed vegeta- tion, and everywhere strewn with fragments of rock, rent by frost and the action of time, or hurled by the fury of unusually severe storms. The southwestern exposures of both are bluffs dropping immediately into water of considerable depth. At the rock, the history of which has been made known through the medium of the light-house estab- lishment, the surges generated by gales from the southeast not in- frequently break over the island notwithstanding the fact that it is about fifty feet above mean high-water mark. b THE NAUTILUS. The character of the soil, and the copious moisture from dews and fogs are conducive to very rank growth of several species of maritime plants, affording suitable conditions for the mollusca enumerated. During my visits to the islands, shell collecting has been entirely secondary. Yet the isolation of the islands lends so much interest to the collection that the following records do not seem entirely superfluous, especially as a thorough investigation is not practicable at present : Helix hortensis Miiller. In June, 1896, I found this species in great abundance on Seal Island. They inhabit the rank vegetation toward the western end. The yellow, unbanded phase predominated, only three or four banded ones being found. Some young speci- mens having but two and a half whorls were also found on the occa- sion of this visit. I have not found it on any other island of the group. It was recorded by Mr. C. W. Johnson from Seal Island in THE NAUTILUS for November, 1906, page 77. Vallonia costata Miill. Rather abundant on Seal Island in 1896 among rank herbage and driftwood. Pupilla muscorum Linn. Four specimens were found with the last-named species. They are but 3 millimeters long, half a milli- meter shorter than specimens taken on the adjacent mainland. One is a rich brownish, the others opaque white, all edentulous. Cochlicopa lubrica Miill. One specimen was found under a log, stranded high on Matinicus Rock, August, 1905. Vitrina limpida Gould. Found rather plentiful among stranded chips and rank vegetation on Matinicus Rock, July, 1903. Zonitoides arborea Say. Matinicus Rock. Three specimens under logs, stranded high above normal tide mark, August, 1905. Agriolimax agrestis Linn. Several specimens were found under logs and stones or hidden by rank vegetation on Matinicus Rock, August, 1905. Pyramidula alternata Say. A single dead and broken shell was found at the northern part of Matinicus Island, August, 1905. Pyramidula striatella Anth. Common with the other small species on Seal Island, June, 1896. Succinea obliqua totteniana Lea. One found on Matinicus Rock, July, 1903. Succinea avara Say. Two obtained at Seal Island, June, 1896, and one very small one at Matinicus Rock, July, 1903. THE NAUTILUS. / A LIST OF LAND AND FRESH- WATER SHELLS OF YEMASSEE, SOUTH CAROLINA. BY JOHN B. HENDERSON. In the early part of March last I spent a week upon a plantation near Yemassee, Beaufort Co., South Carolina, the greater part of my time being spent in snail hunting. Beaufort is a low-lying county within the Atlantic coastal plain. Its features are of three distinct sorts : a sandy, dry-pine area, the " knolls " of live oak with rather dense deciduous vegetation, and the swamp lands. The swamps are extensive, often containing forests of cypress and rank growths of aquatic vegetation. In places these swamps are drained and con- verted into rice fields, the latter furnishing excellent stations for fresh-water mollusca. The pine lands harbor a scant molluscan fauna. The great majority of land shells are to be found only in and about the edges of the deciduous forests. In the depths of the swamps I found almost nothing, the fresh-water species seeming to prefer more open and smaller bodies of water — particularly the little ditches which drain the rice fields. The prevailing Polygyra is hopetonensis, a typical costal plain species, as it ranges along the Atlantic border from Norfolk to St. Augustine. It obviously belongs to the fallax-tridentata series and I think is a descendant of the former, which, having migrated into the lowlands of the coast, has been modified by its new environment. The species has become well enough marked to separate it readily from the upland fallax. It admits, however, of several local races which may some day be christened with varietal names. The ex- treme forms are hopetonensis obsoleta Pils. of Newbern and Wilming- ton, N. Car., a large form entirely without teeth upon the outer lip, and a Yemassee race which is very small and with strongly devel- oped denticles. I was surprised to find Euglandina truncata an abundant species so far north. The Yemassee specimens are large, stout fellows of very brilliant pink, rather darker than typical Florida specimens. The following is a complete list of my catch, though it cannot be faunally complete. The entire absence of Amnicolids, Unionidx, Vwiparid.se, and of Ancylus is rather striking. I owe many thanks to Dr. Pilsbry for his critical identification of my shells : Polygyra thyroides Say. Polygyra hopetonensis Strebel. THE NAUTILUS. Polygyra postelliana Bland. Polygyra pustuloides Bland. Euglandina truncata Gmel. Circinaria concava Say. Gastrodonta cerinoidea Antb. Zonitoides arborea Say. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Vitrea indentata Say. Helicodiscus parallelus Say. Euconulus chersinus Say. Bifidaria contracta Say. Bifidaria procera Gld. Succinea campestris unicolor Tryon. Succinea aurea Lea. Planorbis parvus Say. Planorbis tumidus Pfr. Physa cubensis Pfr. Physa heterostropha Say. Lymnaea columella Say. Sphaerium partumeium Say. Pisidium sp. SOME NEW EOCENE FOSSILS FEOM ALABAMA. BY T. H. ALDRICH. The shells described below are all in the cabinet of the writer, and are believed to be new. They are mostly small species or elie very rare, and represented by very few or single specimens. TEREBRATULINA BRDNDIDGENSIS n. sp. PI. I, figs. 1, 2, 3. Shell medium, narrower than high, radial threads very strong in the young shell becoming finer in the older, and in the oldest forms appearing as very fine lines only. A central, raised rib doubled shows on the ventral valve, replaced with a depression between two ribs on dorsal valve ; foramen oblong. Longest diameter 14 mm., width 11 mm. Smallest form figured is 9^ mm. and 7 mm. Locality : Eocene of Brundidge, Ala. Remarks: This species occurs in a stratum of white limestone which was exposed in a large well close to the R. R. station. This well was dug for water for a supply for the engines, but when the THE NAUTILUS. 9 limestone stratum was dug into it failed as a water tank. Associated with the species is Terebratula wilmingtonensis L. & S., Ostrea vomer Morton and several other species which occur in the white limestone or Jackson horizons. The area surrounding the well is typical Nana- falia lignitic deposits. So far no other outcrop of this limestone has been observed in the vicinity, but careful search is yet to be made. This discovery was called to my attention by Dr. E. A. Smith, State Geologist of Alabama, who sent me a number of specimens. We subsequently visited the well together and went over the locality south of the town, failing to find an outcrop. Dr. Smith thinks his discovery is an " overlap " of the white limestone or Vicksburg, somewhat as in certain Georgia localities. All the different forms of Terebratula wilmingtonensis mentioned and figured by Prof. Dall in Vol. 3 of Wagner Free Inst. of Science, p. 1537, pi. 58, figures 14-20, are found here. TURBONILLA (STRIOTURBONILLA) HARRISI n. Sp. PI. 1, fig. 8. Shell as figured, small, with approximately parallel sides. Whorls eight, the two apical ones smooth ; spire obtuse ; whorls longitudin- ally striated with numerous impressed lines ; base of shell smooth ; aperture ovate, pillar lip bearing one fold. Length 3 mm. Locality : Wood's Bluff, Ala. Remarks : This species is doubtless the same one mentioned by Prof. G. D. Harris in Bulletins of American Paleontology, No. 11, p. 96, pi. 12, fig. 10, 1899, as Turbonilla sp.(?), but he evidently had an immature shell. Named in honor of Prof. Harris. TURBONILLA (CINGULINA) ANITA n. sp. PI. 1, fig. 12. Shell medium, spire obtuse, whorls nine, the two apical ones smooth, balance with about six spiral impressed lines ; lines of growth very fine and rather close set, aperture ovate. Pillar lip twisted and slightly prolonged at base. Length 6 mm, breadth of body whorl 2£ mm. Locality : Wood's Bluff, Ala., and same horizon 6 miles east of Thomasville, Ala. CERITHIOPSIS REGULAROIDES n. ep. PI. 1, fig. 7. Shell small, fragment from which this description is made with seven whorls ; these have two raised spirals, which form nodules at the intersection with the longitudinal lines. The spirals are placed one above and the other below the centre of each whorl ; longitu- dinals coarse and prominent ; a smooth raised spiral encircles each 10 THE NAUTILUS. whorl below the suture. The base appears to be smooth, canal twisted. Length of fragment 7£ mm., breadth of basal whorl 2^ mm- Locality : Wood's Bluff horizon six miles east of Thomasville, Ala. Remarks : This species has a general resemblance to Cerithiopsis ftuviatilis Aid., but differs in the position of the raised spirals. MATHILDA ELONGATOIDES n. sp. PI. 1, fig. 6. Shell small, exceedingly narrow and elongated, whorls about four- teen, wfll rounded, carrying three nearly equidistant strong spirals on the main part of each whorl and also a slight one just below the suture. The longitudinals between the spirals are numerous and close set, and rather fine. Body-whorl at base shows several spirals in addition to those above mentioned. Aperture nearly circular. Apical whorls reversed. Length 6 mm., breadth of body-whorl 1 mm. Locality : Wood's Bluff, Ala. MATHILDA SINGULARIS n. sp. PI. 1, fig. 11. Shell small, whorls profusely ornamented ; number of whorls five, besides the embryonic apex ; apical whorls twisted and pointed hori- zontally or at right angles to the axis of the shell. The main whorls are angulated by a very strong peripheral line with a smaller one above, and from one to two still finer ones between. Body-whorl shows several (about four) fine spirals below the central one, extreme base nearly flat. Aperture ovate ; pillar lip reflected, and slightly prolonged into a canal. Locality : Wood's Bluff, Ala. MATHILDA LEONA Aldrich. PI. 1, figs. 4, 5. This species was described from the Wood's Bluff horizon. The present specimen is from the Matthew's Landing beds, one mile west of Oak Hill, Ala. The original description was drawn from a young shell, and in this example the embryonic whorls are twisted to the left and the spire projects horizontally. This specimen also shows a small umbilicus. SCALA VETUSTA n. Sp. PI. 1, fig. 9. Shell as figured, number of whorls unknown, but four showing in type ; they are rapidly expanding and ornamented with about twenty raised ribs; suture defined with a strong carina which makes a raised and angulated boundary for the base ; the ribs continue over this line, and disappear into a deep and wide umbilicus. The spiral lines do not show upon the base. The figure is natural size. THE NAUTILUS XXL PLATE I. ALDPICH . NEW EOCENE FOSSILS. THE NAUTILUS XXI. PLATE II. tr-- JACKSON : RADUL.E OF ACMAEA. THE NAUTILUS. 11 Locality : Midway stage on McConnico plantation, Wilcoi Co., Alabama. Remarks : This specimen is quite imperfect, but the species is so well marked that it deserves a name. It is probably the same form mentioned by Prof. Harris in Bulletin of Am. Pal., No. 4, p. 232. SCALA DOLOSA n. Sp. PI. 1, fig. 13. Shell rather small, cancellated ; whorls eight, the first two smooth, balance with spiral lines which are coarse near the middle of each whorl, these lines give each whorl an angulated profile. The spirals are nodular in part at the intersections with the longitudinals. The figured specimen shows a varix ; aperture nearly circular, outer lip expanded and rounded, interior smooth. Umbilicus open, and carrying a groove. Base of shell carrying numerous spirals, but no nodes, the lines of growth being very fine. Length 7 mm., breadth 4 mm. Locality : Near Grave Yard Hill, Wilcox Co., Ala. Midway Stage. FlSSURELLA UNILINEATUS n. Sp. PI. 1, fig. 10. Shell small, rather thin, depressed conic, cancellated. The radial lines are equal and regularly spaced, while the longitudinals are bowed between the radials, giving to the surface a wavy appearance, no nodules at the intersections, the lines crossing regularly. Hole oval, with a complete oval callus inside. Longest diam. 13 mm., breadth about 7 mm., height 3 mm. Locality : Wood's Bluff, Ala. NOTES. ASHMUNELLA. On page 134 of the last number, the second line from bottom should read ASHMUNELLA RHTSSA HYPORHTSSA Ckll., in place of " Ashmunella rhyssa (Ckll.)." Owing to my absence in Florida I had no opportunity to see the proofs of this article. H. A. P. THE ORIGIN OF THE LUNG IN AMPULLAEIA. BY W. K. BROOKS.1 Through the courtesy of Dr. Alfred G. Mayer I was able to visit and partially explore the Everglades of Florida in March, 1906. As we pushed our way through the tall reeds and grasses that cover the 1 From the Report of the Department of Marine. Biology, Tortugas, Florida. Extracted from the Fifth Year-Book of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, p. 109, 1907, 12 THE NAUTILUS. shallow water of the Everglades, we found great numbers of small eggs attached to the stems of the reeds and grasses above the surface of the water but close to it. The eggs were arranged in vertical rows, and were enclosed in calcareous shells, resembling in these respects the eggs of terrestrial pulmonate gasteropods. We also found in the water in great abundance the prosobranchiate gasteropod Ampullaria, and when some of the older eggs were opened they were found to contain young specimens of this genus. The Paludinidse, which are closly related to the Ampullaridse, are aquatic, viviparous, and breathe by gills, and their structure indicates that they are true prosobranchs, descended from and closely related to the marine prosobranchs. Ampullaria has gills, is partly aquatic, and seems to be a true prosobranch, so far as its general structure is in question, but as it has a lung, and is able to breathe air and live out of the water, and as it also lays, in the air, eggs in calcareous shells, like those of the terrestrial pulmonates, the question whether it is primarily a pulmonate, with secondary resemblance to the pro- sobranchs or primarily a prosobranch with secondary resemblance to the pulmonates, suggests itself. As the embryonic history of the breathing organs may be expected to throw light upon this question, a quantity of the eggs were col- lected and taken to the Marine Laboratory in the Dry Tortugas. There the eggs were opened, the embryos removed and sketched, and then hardened and preserved for embryological examination. On my return to Baltimore I placed the material in the hands of Mr. B. McGlone, who has studied the development of the respiratory organs under my supervision, and has nearly completed his work, which will soon be ready for publication. He has shown that the lung of Ampullaria is a member of the series of gill-filaments, and that it must be regarded as a modified gill, homologous with a cteni- dium, or with more than one. It is therefore an organ which has been secondarily acquired, and not derived from the lung of the ter- restrial pulmonates. Both lung and gills arise very early in the embryonic history of Ampullaria, and at about the same time. In a very young embryo, soon after the mantle makes its appearance, a ridge or thickening of the epithelium of the inner surface of the mantle indicates the region from which the gill-filaments, the lung and the osphradium are to arise. The osphradium is developed from one end of this ridge, the gill-filaments from the other, and between the two the ridge becomes infolded into the substance of the mantle to give rise to the lung, which may be regarded as a modified and invaginated gill-filament. The similarity between the lung of the pulmonates and that of Ampullaria is therefore nothing more than a new illustration of a resemblance between organs that have been acquired independently under like physiological conditions. THE NAUTILUS. VOL. XXI. JUNE, 1907. No. 2. A NEW POLYGYRA FROM NORTH CAROLINA (P. SOELNERI). BY JOHN B. HENDERSON. On a collecting trip to the coastal plain region of North Carolina last autumn, with Mr. Soelner, of Washington, the following unde- scribed Poly gyro, was found : POLYGYRA SOELNERI n. sp. Plate III, figs. 1, 2. Shell globosely depressed ; spire low conoid, periphery rounded ; perforate, the opening half covered by columellar lip. Surface very glossy, closely, deeply and evenly ribbed throughout except on first 1^ whorls which are smooth. Whorls 5^, regularly increasing, the last falling abruptly and shortly in front, having a pale spot at the deflection. Narrowly and deeply contracted behind the lip. Aper- ture oblique and irregularly crescentic. Lip reflexed with a flange- like internal thickening which is widest basally and terminates short of the columellar end of the lip. A rather long curved white par- ietal tooth stands upon a hardly perceptible parietal film. Color mahogany, with a glossy satin-like sheen ; lip purplish outwardly, the inner flange buff. Alt. 7, greater diam. 11, lesser diam. 9-| mm. Habitat among cypress logs in a swampy region on the north shore of Lake Waccamaw, North Carolina. This remarkably pretty little Polygyra, which is very distinct from any other known species, might be included in the section Mesodon, its nearest ally being P. christyi, from which, however, it differs in being larger, less depressed and umbilicated. I take pleasure in naming the species after Mr. Soelner, my enthusiastic companion in the field when it was first found. 14 THE NAUTILUS. NOTES ON GUNDLACHIA. I. BY BRYANT WALKER. The validity of the genus Gundlachia Pfr. is one of the disputed points in systematic conchology. The article by Hedley, reprinted with notes by Dr. Pilsbry in the NAUTILUS in 1895 (Vol. IX, p. 61), gives a very complete summary of the data down to that date. The only omission in regard to the North American forms that I have found, being the citation of G. ancyliformis Pfr. from Palma Sola, Manatee Co., Fla., by Simpson in 1888 (Con. Ex., II, p. 96). So far as I have been able to ascertain, no additional data in re- gard to our species have been published. In the NAUTILUS for January, 1904, Dr. Dall called attention to a very interesting account by Nordinskiold of a septa-forming An- cylus from South America and expressed the opinion that the so-called Gundlachise are merely Ancyli, which under favorable con- ditions are able to protect themselves from drought and cold by forming an epiphragm and subsequently '• to secrete an enlarged and somewhat discrepant shell." The occurrence with typical Gundlachia of non-septate individ- uals indistinguishable in shell characteristics from Ancylus has been noted by several writers. Hedley, who believes the genus a valid one by reason of anatomical differences, apparently inclines to the view that "in unfavorable circumstances a septum is never formed." While Dr. Pilsbry (NAUT., IV, p. 48), speaking of this apparent co- existence of two forms, remarks, that if correct, " Gundlachia will furnish the most extraordinary case of dimorphism known among our American mollusks." During the last few years I have had occasion to examine criti- cally large numbers of our Eastern American Ancyli, and until within the last year, with the exception of a small series collected by Ferriss near Joliet (to be discussed later), I have discovered no ten- dency whatever to septa-forming in any instance. Recently, however, material from Ohio, Indiana, Alabama and Mississippi has been received, which is of considerable interest as bearing on the question, and the evidence thus afforded is herewith submitted for consideration. THE NAUTILUS XXI PLATE II] U.- HENDERSON : POLYGYRA SOELNERI. PILSBRY: MEXICAN LAND SHELLS. THE NAUTILUS XXI. PLATE IV. 6 8 10 11 WALKER: NOTES ON GUNDLACHIA. THE NAUTILUS. 15 The examination of this material leads necessarily to a study of the described forms of North American Gundlachia, and the results of this work may properly precede the consideration of the new ma- terial referred to. I. Gundlachia stimpsoniana Smith. Plate IV. This species was described in 1870 (Ann. N. Y. Lye. N. H., IX, p. 399, fig. 6) from specimens collected in ponds at Greensport, Long Island, N. Y., and on Shelter Island. Only the " primary " stage was figured. It has not been found elsewhere, so far as I know. Through the kindness of Mr. J. B. Henderson, Jr., I have been able to examine the original lot of this species from the Smith col- lection. It consists of 71 specimens from Greensport and 1 from Shelter Island. The Shelter Island example is a young shell that has completed the septum and is similar to the one figured (figs. 10-12). The Greensport set may be divided into four groups : 1. 60 examples of the primary stage, with the septum in all stages of development, from the first beginnings at the posterior margin to the completed septum. With one exception, these specimens, al- though varying somewhat in size and shape, are similar in all other respects. The matured, or rather, perfected examples, vary from 1^ to 2 mm. in length, f to 1 in width and from £ to | in height. The shape is an elongated oval, the ends bluntly rounded, the an- terior extremity being usually somewhat more expanded. The sides are nearly parallel, usually somewhat constricted in the centre, and rather more so on the right than on the left, but in the smaller spe- cimens are occasionally slightly convex. The apex is blunt, slightly projecting and inclined to the right. It is radiately striate as in Ferrissia. The anterior surface is distinctly ribbed with fine radiat- ing ribs, which, however, do not extend to the apex. The septum for the posterior half or two-thirds is either fiat or, more usually, slightly convex. From about the centre of the shell it is flattened and descends slightly to the aperture. This depression is, no doubt, caused by the body of the animal in moving in and out of the con- stantly decreasing aperture. The lines of growth are curved and delicate, but quite distinct. On completion of its growth the edge of the septum is abruptly turned upwards to the level of the edge of the shell, and the whole margin of the aperture thus formed is slightly 16 THE NAUTILUS. thickened and becomes continuous as shown in figure 11. The ex- ceptional specimen noted above is noticeably larger, but proportion- ately more depressed than the other, measuring 2-| x 1^ x -^ mm. But in sculpture it is precisely the same, and I have no doubt that it belongs to the same species. In this, the septum is but partially de- veloped. A very similar specimen in size and appearance, but with- out any appearance of a septum, is noted under group 2. Nearly all of these specimens are "amber-colored," as stated by Smith, but this is caused by a slight ferri-oxide deposit on the surface, which disappears on the application of oxalic acid, and leaves the whole shell of a clear, transparent, corneous color. 2. Five examples of the primitive stage with no trace of septum. Evidently that growth had not yet begun. Four of them are of the usual size and shape of the " primary " shell. The fifth is somewhat larger and, barring the lack of septum, almost a duplicate of the ab- errant individual noted in group 1. 3. Three examples in which the secondary growth had been made without forming a septum. In all of them the primary stage is sharply defined by the difference of color, and in color and shape agrees substantially with the usual appearance at that period. In one of them (figs. 3, 6, 9) the posterior slope is not continuous exter- nally, there being a well-marked ''break" between the two stages of growth, and internally the secondary growth flares out at a decided angle all around the posterior margin of the primary shell. In the other two examples, the primary shell is rather more con- tracted laterally than usual, but the secondary growth is, on all sides, in a substantially direct continuation of the primary shell. It be- comes more or less irregular, however, as it progresses and the gen- eral effect of the entire shell is that of abnormal growth. None of these shells, however, are referable to any of the described species of Ancylus. Smith states that the Greensport Gundlachia were asso- ciated with Ancylus fuscus and with " more elevated specimens, probably belonging to another species." If his identification of A. fuscus was correct, the difference in the apical sculpture, to say nothing of the general contour of the shell, forbid the union of the two forms. What his other species were, must remain uncertain until his specimens can be examined. Possibly they were non-sep- tate examples of " stimpsoniana" in which the line of demarcation between the primary and secondary growths was not so distinctly in- dicated as in these specimens, which he included with his Gundlachice. THE NAUTILUS. 17 4. Three examples having both a septum and a more or less com- plete secondary growth. Smith states that of about one hundred examples collected in the course of three years, only two were fully mature. Of the specimens now in the collection, only one is appar- ently mature, and that is much smaller than the dimensions given by Smith for the fully mature shell, i. e., 5£x3£xl^ mm. As shown by the figures (figs. 2, 5 and 8), it is somewhat defective along the left margin. Allowing for the broken edge it measures 3|x2^xl mm. In shape, however, it agrees substantially with Smith's de- scription, and in the absence of a better, may be considered as typical. The second specimen, if ever mature, has had the secondary growth broken back on all sides nearly to the primary shell, so that it is quite impossible to say what the original size or shape was. The third example is apparently the one referred to by Smith (p. 400) as having begun the secondary growth with a septum covering " less than a quarter of the aperture." As shown by the figures (figs. 1, 4 and 7), it has been broken along the posterior margin, but enough remains to give a good idea of its original appearance. It measures 2.75 x 2 x | mm. If this is the specimen mentioned by Smith, and is "about two thirds " grown, the shell represented by figs. 2, 5 and 8 is not far from being fully matured. The shape of this specimen is quite different from that of the " typical " shell, owing probably to the difference in the size of the septum. The re- semblance in outline between it and the non-septate specimen figured is quite strong, as shown by figures 4 and 6. This species is apparently quite distinct from both G. meekiana and G. californica, being characterized by its larger and more widely-ex- panded secondary growth. More material showing the mature form is very desirable, and it is to be hoped that collectors resident on Long Island will make its rediscovery a matter of special consid- eration. MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF MONTEREY BAY, CALIFORNIA. BY S. 3. BERRY. During the summer of 1906, the writer attended a six weeks' ses- sion of the Marine Biological Laboratory of Stanford University, at Pacific Grove, California. While there considerable attention was 18 THE NAUTILUS. given to molluscan life in particular and an extremely interesting collection was made of the different forms. 394 species were ob- tained, a practically complete list of which follows. In addition to the mollusks, four species of brachiopods were collected. The major part of the collecting was done along the shore about Pacific Grove, especially at what is locally known as the " Third Beach," and an interesting expanse of rocks called the " Big Tide Pool." In addition to this, a number of dredging excursions were undertaken with the aid of a gasoline launch, which resulted very successfully. Most of the dredging was done in quite shallow water, although one trip was made to a point off Moss Landing near the middle of the bay. On this occasion we twice pulled up the dredge filled to the brim with living echinoderms of the genus Echinarach- nius, the common " sand-dollar," some two bushels in all. All of the mollusca collected on such occasions were given over to the writer, and his sincere thanks are due to Professor George Clinton Price, in charge of the laboratory, to Mr. Frank A. Woodworth, of Pacific Grove, and to many of his fellow-students for much valuable aid in the way of numerous specimens, pertinent suggestions and help of every description in the preparation of this paper. The writer is also greatly indebted to Dr. William H. Dall and Mr. Paul Bartch, of the United States National Museum, who kindly determined all doubtful material and who have now in hand the description of the many new or undescribed species found. The new species are marked with an asterisk. BRACHIOPODA. Glottidia albida Hinds. Several living specimens were obtained at from twelve to forty fathoms' depth. Terebratulina caput-serpentis Linn6. A few very young speci- mens, presumably of this species, were dredged. Adult specimens are occasionally brought in from deeper water by the fishermen, usually attached to coral. They are of the form which used to be known as var. unguicula Carpenter. Terebratulina transversa Dall. A few poor specimens were dredged at various depths, adhering to fragments of hard blue clay, shells, etc. Laqueus californicus Koch. We obtained no good specimens of this handsome brachiopod, but I saw numbers of fine ones which had been brought in by the fishermen. THE NAUTILUS. 19 MOLLUSCA. Nucula belloti A. Adams. One live specimen from about 40 fathoms. Leda taphria Dall. Many empty valves and a few small live spe- cimens were obtained almost everywhere that we dredged in the bay. 12 to 40 fathoms. Leda hamata Carpenter. Occasionally found with the preceding. Barbatia gradata Sowerby. Living; 12 fathoms. Glycimeris intermedia Broderip. No living specimens were ob- tained, but fresh valves were dredged in twelve fathoms of water. Philobrya setosa Carpenter. 12 fathoms. Found attached by its byssus to bunches of coralline, which it closely resembles in color and is exceedingly difficult to distinguish. Not rare, and many were doubtless thrown away before we discovered the habitat of this tiny but none the less interesting mollusk. Mytilus californianiis Conrad. This animal covers the rocks just above the low-water mark and may be gathered by the tubful, if one is willing to risk the almost certain wetting he will get, if he clam- bers too far out on the exposed headlands, which are the mussel's favorite haunts. Septifer bifurcatus Reeve. Not rare between tides. Modiolus fornicatus Carpenter. 12 to 40 fathoms. Modiolus rectus Conr. 20 fathoms. Modiolus rectus var. flabellatus Gould. One enormous specimen of this variety was obtained which had been brought in by the fisher- men. It far exceeds in size any other Mytilid in my cabinet. Adula falcata Gould. Living in the hard blue clay with other borers. 12 fathoms. Lithophagus phimula Hanley. With the above ; not uncommon. Crenella divaricata Orbigny. 25 fathoms. Pecten hastatus Sowerby. 12-40 fathoms. No very large or brightly-colored specimens were obtained. Pecten hericeus Gould. One fine valve came up in the dredge from the blue clay region off Del Monte. 12 fathoms. Pecten diegensis Dall. Young specimens were dredged with P. hericeus and P. hastatus. The fishermen sometimes bring in beau- tiful adult specimens from the coral banks. Pecten (Hinnites) giganteus Gray. A few were found at low-tide attached to the under surfaces of rocks. At the great Tide Pool, 20 THE NAUTILUS. where a good " minus " tide lays bare several acres of rocks and weeds, and which teems with all sorts of marine life, this species seems fairly common. Lima dehiscens Conrad. Living; 12 fathoms. Monia macroschisma Deshayes. Living; from shore line to 12 fathoms. Cardita subyuadrata Carpenter. Living ; shore line to 12 fathoms. Milneria minima Ball. 12 fathoms ; not common, as we found it. Kellia luperousii Deshayes. Found living on shore and also dn dged at 12 fathoms. "With it occurs the following: Kellia sub orbicular is Montagu. Rochfortia tumida Carpenter. Shore line to 40 fathoms. Diplodonta orbella Gould. Valves were found on the beach and the species was dredged at 25 fathoms. Phacoides californicus Conrad. Low-tide to 40 fathoms. Fairly common. Phacoides approximates Dall. 40 fathoms. Phacoides annulatus Reeve. One valve was dredged at a depth of about 25 fathoms. Chama pellucida Sowerby. Low-tide to 12 fathoms. Cardium quadrigenarium Conrad. 12 fathoms; only a few very young valves found. * Cardium fucanum Dall. One live specimen and several valves dredged at 20 fathoms. It is notable that C. corbis Mart, was not obtained. See description in NAUTILUS, XX, p. 111. Protocardia centifilosa Carpenter. Living; 12 to 30 fathoms. Pisidium occidentale Newcomb. Found in numbers in an old watering-trough at Pacific Grove. Transennella tantilla Gould. Living ; between tides. Tivela stultorum Mawe. Between tides. Tivela (?) marginata Cpr. One valve, found between tides, was thus identified at the National Museum. Saxidomus nuttalli Conrad. 40 fathoms. Marcia subdiaphana Carpenter. 25 fathoms; valves only. Paphia staminea Conr. Paphia staminea var. petiti Deshayes. Paphia staminea var. orbella Carpenter. All found nestling among the rocks between tides. THE NAUTILUS. 21 Paphia tenerrima Carpenter. 12 fathoms ; immature valves only. Venerupis lamellifera Conrad. Some very pretty specimens of this species were found from the shore line down to 12 fathoms. Psephidea ovalis Dall. 12 fathoms. Petricola carditoides Conrad. 12 fathoms; in the blue clay. Petricola californica Conrad. 25 fathoms ; valves only. Psammobia californica Conrad. Low-tide to 12 fathoms; not common. Tellina salmonea Carpenter. 40 fathoms ; rare. Macoma yoldiformis Carpenter. 40 fathoms ; off Moss Landing. One specimen. Sernele rubropicta Dall. 25 fathoms ; valves only. Semele pulchra Sowerby . 1 2 fathoms ; valves only. Cumingia californica Conrad. Not uncommon at low-tide. Cooper ella scintilliformis Carpenter. 40 fathoms ; one live but immature specimen. Sphenia californica Conrad. Low-tide to 15 fathoms ; not rare. Corbula luteola Cpr. 15 fathoms. Saxicava arctica Linne. Low-tide to 12 fathoms. Saxicava pholadis Linne. Low-tide to 12 fathoms. Several very large specimens were found in the abandoned holes of borers. Siliqua lucida Conrad. Living; 15 fathoms; rare. Solen sicarius Gould. Living ; 40 fathoms. Spisula planulata Conrad. Very common at about 12 fathoms' depth. Spisula catilliformis Conr. One valve only ; 40 fathoms ; off Moss Landing. Lyonsia nitida Conrad. 12 fathoms ; rare. Lyonsia spongiophila Dall. Low-tide to 12 fathoms; quite rare. Mytilimeria nuttalli Conrad. Found at low-tide curiously embedded in sponges or colonies of ascidians. The live animals would be passed over and found rarely, except by accident, were it not for the distor- tion in the masses of their hosts caused by their presence, or for the oddly-shaped openings which permit the sea water to reach them. Entodesma saxicola Baird. Among the rocks at low-tide. Parapholas californicus Conrad. 12 fathoms. At this depth the dredge often brought up large fragments of a hard, blue clay which, upon examination, was found to be filled with dead and living spe- cimens of this and other boring mollusks, such as Petricola, Adula, 22 THE NAUTILUS. Pholadidea, etc. Other crevices of this same blue clay yielded Ocin- ebra and many of the finest Chitons obtained. Pholadidea penita Conrad. Found with the above. Pholadidea sagitta Stearns. Found with the above and at a depth of 40 fathoms off Moss Landing. Pholadidea parva Tryon. In Haliotis shells. Pholadidea (Netastomella) darwinii Sowerby. 12 fathoms; in the blue clay. Dentalium neohexagonum Pilsbry. 12 fathoms. Dentalium rectius Carpenter (?). 12 fathoms. One beautiful spe- cimen over an inch long is probably referable to this species. Cadulus nitentior Carpenter. 12 fathoms ; not uncommon. Tornatina harpa Ball. 12 to 40 fathoms. (To be concluded.) A NEW CERITHIUM FROM THE FLORIDA KEYS. BY WILLIAM HEALY DALL. CERITHIUM STANTONI n. sp. Shell solid, acute, conic, the nine whorls rapidly enlarging ; sculp- ture of 7-9 strong, rounded, axial ribs extending from the suture to the periphery, crossed by small, sharply elevated, subequal, some times alternate, close set spiral threads which cover the whole shell ; these threads behind the periphery are white, the strise between them tend to be blackish-brown except on the most prominent part of the ribs where they are yellowish cream color ; from the periphery to the canal the threads as well as the interspaces are brown, and on the canal become lighter again, but are probably more or less var- iable as in other species of the genus ; last whorl with a single varix opposite the outer lip ; aperture semi-lunar, on the body callous, with a strong subsutural ridge setting off a posterior sulcus ; the pillar callous, twisted, very short, smooth ; the outer lip thickened, reflected, internally sharply lirate ; interior white. Lon. of shell 35, of last whorl 16, of aperture 12, max. diam. of shell 17, of aperture 6 mm. Shoals near St. George Cay, Belize, Rev. W. A. Stanton (150294); Florida Keys (110469). THE NAUTILUS. 23 A hermit crab fragment retaining its coloration, sent by Father Stanton, was long believed to be due to foreign ballast, as nothing of the sort was known from the West Indies. The recent acquisi- tion of a bleached but entire specimen from the Florida Keys has confirmed its American habitat. The species is nearest the C. guiniacurn Philippi (1849) from the Gaboon, West Africa, but is more conical, and wider in the last whorl, and rather larger. The sharp regular striation and few large rounded ribs are its most striking characteristics. AMONG THE CEPHALOPODS. BY R. E. C. 9TEARNS. According to the papers, the big steamship Northwestern that went ashore last March on La Touche Island, southeastern Alaska, has been floated and is now at Valdez. Divers making the survey of the bottom of the sea where the steamer rested, were driven away repeatedly by " great cuttlefish, which swarmed in the vicinity of the wreck." It was feared that these " sea monsters " would prevent the saving of the vessel, but the divers proved game, made the necessary survey, drilled the holes for the dynamite, and laid the charge which blew to atoms the rock that had trapped the steamer, without damaging the vessel. May 3, 1907. PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED, THE MOLLTSCA OF COLORADO (University of Colorado Studies, vol. iv, no. 2, 3, Feb. and Apr., 1907). By Junius Henderson. This useful addition to the series of state hand-books of mollusks gives an epitome of earlier work by Ingersoll, Cockerell and others, with substantial additions to the list of species (some 25 being here first reported from Colorado), and to the locality records. A key to species and a bibliography are given. Most of the species are illus- trated, the Unionidce by excellent original figures, the snails by cuts 24 THE NAUTILUS. borrowed from Binney's works. " The study of the influence of altitude upon mollusks in this region has given chiefly negative re- sults. Instead of dwarfing the species, as in Montana and other regions where the cold of high altitudes is more intense, the higher altitudes seem more favorable to land snails than lower levels, be- cause of the increased humidity. The finest specimens of Oreohelix strigosa and Vitrina alaskana found have been at 11,000 and 9,300 feet respectively." " Among bivalves we have found Pisidia at 11,000 feet, Calyculina at 8,500 feet." Regarding some of the older records the author remarks upon " doubts as to the accuracy of identification in many instances in the early reports." Such difficulties are always encountered, and their removal costs much time and labor. The identification of " Zoni- toides conspectus," Succinea salleana, nuttalliana, rustic ana, Ancylus fraqilis and caurinus and Physa heterostropha should especially be looked into. The paper will form an excellent basis for further work in Colorado, and will be useful for work anywhere in the Rockies. THE RESULTS OF DEEP-SEA INVESTIGATION IN THE TASMAJ? SEA. MOLLUSCA FROM EIGHTY FATHOMS OFF NARRABEEN. By C. HEDLEY (Records of the Australian Museum, vi, pp. 283-304, pis. 54-56). This paper contains descriptions of 18 new species, including a new genus, Coriareus related to Lascea. The species are all beautifully illustrated. NOTES. ERRATA. — The differences between the two New England species of Acmaen. The NAUTILUS?, May, 1907. About half way down the 3d page: "... radula of an adult shell of alveus are perhaps the squarest of all, fig. 4." This should be " fig. 3." Also several lines farther down "... nearly at right angles to the next tooth and the cusp of (U) faces the center of the lingual membrane (L)." The (L) should be after the word " tooth." HENRY JACKSON, JR. THE NAUTILUS XXI PLATE V. 4 1-1O, PACHYCHEILUS VALLESENSIS. 11, POLVGYRA POLITA. 12, P. AULACOMPHALA. 13, PALUDESTRINA TAMPICOENSIS. THE NAUTILUS. VOL. XXI. JULY, 1907. No. 3. DESCRIPTION OF A NEW MEXICAN PACHYCHEILUS. BY ANSON A. HINKLEY. PACHYCHEILUS VALLESENSIS n. sp. PI. 5, figs. 1-10. Shell conic, solid, smooth ; suture impressed ; aperture widely ovate, circular at the base, obtusely angular above, purple within ; whorls 7, convex ; on young and also well preserved specimens the apical ones are slightly carinate or striate ; spire about half the length of the shell. Operculum corneous, spiral, nucleus subcentral; when viewed from above has a little resemblance to a small Planorbis. Length 32, cliam. 16 mm. Length 33, diam. 19 mm. Habitat. Valles river, Valles, State of San Luis Potosi, Mexico. " This species resembles short forms of P. /(evissimus, from which it differs by the absence of fine spiral lines, the more heavily calloused columellar lip, and the darker interior. No other Pachy- cheilus has been found so far north." 1 The species is named from the river in which it is the most plenti- ful mollusk. Figure 1 may be considered the type, though its size is above the average. There is often a flattening of the body whorl and occasionally a constriction or shallow groove, as on some of the Pleurocera. Mature specimens usually show 6 whorls ; when the spire is well preserved, as in fig. 8 and fig. 9, there are 8. In young specimens the aperture is angular below, see fig. 5. In mature 1 Note from Dr. H. A. Pilsbry. The plate illustrating this species will ap- pear in the next number. 26 THE NAUTILUS. specimens the callous deposit on the columella is heavy, and where it meets the labium above, it is very thick. This is well shown in figs. 3 and 8 ; within the aperture the outer lip is bordered by a lighter-colored or white zone. All mature specimens and many of the immature ones are more or less covered with a deposit of calcareous matter, which is often so thick as to mislead as to the form of the shell, see figs. 4 and 9. Individuals are very numerous in some places, and scattering ones can be found almost anywhere in the river. The very young were found where there was little or no current, on sand or mud bottom, or on roots and plants at the water's edge ; older ones were common on rocks or the river bed where the current was strong. At two places the alluvial soil, though above any indication of high-water, contained large numbers of this species, reminding the writer of the remains of Tulotoma magnified at places along the Coosa river in Alabama. Figures 8 and 9 are from the stream of a spring, and are more perfect in the spire than those from the river, fig. 8 has the deposit all removed, and fig. 9 has enough removed to show the spire. Fig. 10 is not mature ; it will be seen that the heavy columellar callus is not yet formed. Fig. 2 is an extra large one ; it and figs. 3 and 7 are more than usually inflated. Much smaller ones were found than the one shown in fig. 5. DESCRIPTIONS OF NEW MEXICAN LAND SHELLS. BY HENRY A. PILSBRY. A full account of the mollusks collected by Mr. A. A. Hinkley in the vicinity of Tampico and in the State of San Luis Potosi will later be submitted by him ; meantime some of the new forms are described below. Polyyyra (?) martensiana n. sp. PI. V, figs. 11, 12. The shell is rather thin, depressed, about the shape of P. texasiana, umbilicate, the umbilicus rapidly contracting within; surface glossy, pale brownish-corneous with a faint brown band above the periphery, weakly marked with unequal growth-lines. Upper surface nearly flat, the spire being very low conic; periphery above the middle, the base convex. Whorls 4^ to 5£, convex, slowly increasing, the first THE NAUTILUS. 27 smooth, the last whorl very indistinctly subangular in front of the aperture, elsewhere rounded peripherally, slightly descending in front. The aperture is very oblique, wider than high, about one- fourth of its circumference is excised by the preceding whorl; peri- stome evenly, rather narrowly reflexed throughout, slightly dilated at the axial termination; parietal callus thin and transparent. Alt. 6, diam. 11, width of umbilicus 2 mm. Alt. 8.8, diam. 4.8 mm. Tampico, Mexico, type loc.; also Valles, farther inland, in the State of San Luis Potosi. This species is remarkable for the complete absence of teeth in the aperture, in other respects having a general resemblance to Poly- gyras of the texasiana group. Its generic position can be decided only by examination of the soft anatomy. It may possibly be a Praticolella. Six examples were taken at Tampico, one at Valles. Named for the late Professor E. von Martens. Holospira hinkleyi n. sp. PI. Ill, figs. 3, 4. The shell is fusiform, widest above the middle, at the seventh whorl, above which it tapers rapidly and below slowly; whitish. Whorls nearly 10, the first smooth, projecting, flattened above, with a central dimple, the second whorl narrower, very convex, smooth; following whorls sculptured with very oblique well raised threads, rather sparse on the early whorls, then more numerous, but sep- arated by spaces wider than the threads. The whorls of the cone are somewhat flattened, except near the lower suture where they are abruptly curved, and the threads are a little enlarged. On the penult and last whorls the threads become strongly arcuate ; the whorls are convex, with very deep sutures. The latter part of the last whorl becomes free and descends deeply. It is somewhat flat- tened on the upper and outer faces, elsewhere rounded. The aper- ture is transversely ovate, brown within, with a continuous, very broadly expanded, flattened, thin peristome. Internally there are four laminee : a strong parietal which arises in the latter part of the penult and continues to where the last whorl becomes free; a shorter columellar, in the median part of the last whorl; a high basal lamina in the first half of the last whorl, and a thin but well-developed palatal lamina, below the middle of the outer wall, in the first half of the last whorl. 28 THE NAUTILUS. Length 9.8, diam. 2.9 mm. El Abra, State of San Luis Potosi, Mexico, collected by A. A. Hinkley. This species is well characterized by the freely descending last whorl, the " neck " being much longer than in any other member of the typical subgenus of Holospira. The four internal laminae are well developed, and situated somewhat lower than in H. yoldfussi. Eight specimens were taken, part of them immature. ZONITOIDES PENTAGYRA n. Sp. PI. Ill, figs. 6, 7, 8. The shell is slightly larger than Z. minuscula, umbilicate, the width of the umbilicus contained between 4 and 4| times in that of the shell; thin, whitish in the dead specimens seen, similar in color to Z. minuscula. Surface glossy, marked with very weak growth- lines, and with very faint fine spiral striae on the base, more distinct in immature shells. Spire quite convex. Whorls 5, narrow and very slowly increasing, convex, the last well rounded peripherally. Aperture somewhat oblique, quite small, and narrowly lunate. Peristome simple as usual. Alt. 1.4, diam. 2.7 mm. Tampico, in river drift, with Z. minuscula and Z. singleyana and various Pupillidce, etc. Type no. 93796 A. N. S. P., from Mr. Hinkley's collection. This species is readily distinguished from the two associated forms of Zonitoides by the closely coiled whorls and the small, narrowly lunate aperture. It has some resemblance to Pycnogyra bercndti, of the region of Vera Cruz. It is comparatively rare in the river debris, while Z. minuscula and singleyana occur in copious quantity. SPIRAXIS TAMPICOENSIS Pilsbry. PI. Ill, fig. 5. Drift debris at Tampico. This very slender shell has been de- scribed in the current number of the Manual of Gonclioloyy, p. 24. CECILIOIDES (C^ECILIANOPSIS) JOD n. sp. The shell is iniperforate, very minute, oblong, slowly tapering to an obtuse summit, whitish (probably clear corneous when living), smooth and glossy. Whorls 4£, slightly convex. Aperture less than half the total length, piriform, shaped like that of Euglandina, the outer lip arcuate, thin, columella very concave, covered with a thin callous film, distinctly truncate at the base. Length 2.1, diam. 1 mm. THE NAUTILUS. 29 Tarnpico, in river debris, abundant. This tiny snail seems to be at least subgenerically distinct from Ctzcilianella (Cecilioides) by the very obtuse summit and short wide spire. It is closely related to A. consobrina Orb. IN BE CYTHEEEA PETECHIALIS OF CAEPENTEE'S MAZATLAN CATALOGUE. BY ROBERT E. C. STEARNS. In Dr. Ball's "Synopsis of the Family Veneridse," 1 etc., he re- marks "Cytherea petechialis Lamarck, 1818, is listed by Carpenter from Mazatlan having been found among the Reigen shells, but it is certainly exotic, none having appeared from there for half a cen- tury." It is not unlikely that the shell collected by Reigen was an ex- ample of the exceedingly rare and handsome variety of Macrocallista (Chionella) squalida, the color markings of which are suggestive of the Asiatic petechialis. In my paper on " The Shells of the Tres Marias,"3 etc., etc., under Gytherea (Callista) chionsea I refer to the matter. I have never seen more than half a dozen examples of the variety. The National Museum contains if I am not mistaken two or more specimens. I am quite familiar with squalida as well as petechialis having had a great many of both species, and for many years distributed both freely in the course of exchanges. The West Coast species is com- mon in Scammon's Lagoon with Macron ^Ethiops Reeve (==J/. Kellettii Hinds) and elsewhere on both sides of the peninsula and in the Gulf of California. THE Tj. S. COAST SUEVET EXPEDITION TO ALASKA IN THE YEAE 1867. BY ROBERT E. C. STEARNS. If not a stroke of genius, it was a timely inspiration that caused Dr. C. Hart Merriam to expand what might have been hardly more than a notable pleasure excursion into an important scientific expe- dition. Probably never before were so many eminent scientific men brought together, and under such agreeable circumstances, as formed 1 Proc. U. S. Nat. Museum, p. 408, vol. xxvi, 1902. 2Proc. U. S. Nat. Museum, p. 153, vol. xvii, 1894. 30 THE NAUTILUS. the party that went north on the steamer G. W. Elder, constituting the Harriraan Alaska Expedition. It was also a happy thought that led Dr. Dall to utilize the oppor- tunity for publication in the Harriman Expedition Series, of his volume on the " Land and Fresh- Water Mollusks," which has been appropriately reviewed by Dr. Pilsbry.1 It will doubtless be a standard reference book for the next quarter of a century. The number of species collected by the expedition is nowhere stated. With a copy of Dr. Dall's volume before me, memory re- calls what was an important event in its time, forty years ago, the U. S. Coast Survey Expedition to Alaska,2 in charge of Professor George Davidson, which left San Francisco, July 21, 1867, and re- turning, arrived in San Francisco on the following 18th of November. In this, the first expedition under the flag in connection with the acquisition of Alaska, or perhaps more accurately, Russian America, provision was made for biological investigation, hence my special interest in it, and further, for the reason that two members of the biological staff were kindly appointed by Professor Davidson on my suggestion. Mr. W. G. W. Harford was the conchologist and gen- eral collector. The season proved unfavorable, the weather being bad, and the collection of mollusks, therefore, in number of species, was small. Of the marine forms 69 species were taken ; the BuccinidcB were determined by Dr. William Stimpson, the rest by the writer. The few land shells as named below, were identified by Dr. J. G. Cooper. Helix columbiana Lea, Sitka ; Chilcot River, 59° 9' N. Helix vancouverensis Lea, Sitka ; Vancouver Island. Helix ruderata Stud., Ounalaska. Helix fulva Drap., Sitka ; Ounalaska. Vitrina pellucida Mull. (?). Zua lubrica Mull., Sitka ; Kodiak. The list as it appeared in the Coast Survey volume, contained many typographical errors ; it was subsequently revised and pub- lished by me.3 NAUTILUS, Vol. XIX, December, 1905. 'Report of the Supt. U. S. Coast Survey, during the year 1867. Appendix No. 18, pp. 187-329. Washington, D. C., 1869. 3 Shells collected by the U. S. Coast Survey Expedition to Alaska in the year 1867. Proc. Gal. Acad. Nat. Sciences, Dec. 2, 1867. THE NAUTILUS. 31 This and the other paper l mentioned in the foot-note, which con- tained a few pages on the circumboreal distribution of molluscan species, were omitted from the bibliography of Dr. Ball's volume. A FEW NOTES ON SAY'S EABLY WRITINGS AND SPECIES. BY V. STERKI. Again and again, these last years, I have looked over a copy of T. Say's " Conchology " in the "British Encyclopedia" (Nichol- son's),2 and found a few things which caught my attention particu- larly and appear worth mentioning and discussing if compared with our present interpretation. It is unnecessary to say that the re- marks are not written for the sake of criticizing the father of con- chology in this country. His difficulties were doubtless great with respect to both working up his material and having the articles printed according to his intentions. Of the introduction and general description, I would refer only to one point or two. Say justly protests against the view then prev- alent, that the beaks of a bivalve mark the under side, stating that in the natural position of the mussel they are above. At the same time, what we now regard as anterior and posterior parts, he desig- nates as the right and left sides, evidently from lack of knowledge of the organization of the soft parts. Hence also the terms: '' aequi- lateral and inequilateral," for which we now must say " equipartite and inequipartite." He calls the distance from the beaks to the opposite or " posterior " margin as length, the one at right angles to it as breadth, as some noted conchologists have done up to recent years. It is interesting to note, however, that soon he approached a more correct conception, even in the same article: in descriptions, e. ing classes : Patrons, life members, active annual members, associates, and corresponding members. A limited number of honorary corresponding mem- bers may be authorized by the council if deemed desirable. QUALIFICATIONS. — A patron shall be a donor to the Society of any sum ex- ceeding the total of two life-membership fees, and shall be entitled to all pub- lications of the Society and to receive gratis any periodical which may be dis- tributed, as its organ, to the members by the Society. A life membership may be secured by the payment to the Society's treasurer of the sum of one hun- dred dollars ; active membership by the annual payment in advance of the sum of five dollars j1 associate membership by the annual payment in advance of one dollar and a half by American associates and two dollars by foreign asso- ciates or corresponding members. Honorary members may be relieved of pay- ment at the time of election by the vote of the executive council. All members shall be nominated to the council by the application of any three members or associates in good standing through the secretary, and shall be elected by a majority vote of the council, but no election shall be deemed effective until the treasurer has received the first annual subscription from the nominee, and the publications of the Society shall not be sent to any member subsequently, more than two months in arrears. All membership fees shall be due and payable at the beginning of the year, and no subscription for the ben- efit of any member or associate to the organ of the society shall be made by the treasurer until this annual fee shall have been paid. SECTIONS. — To facilitate local intercourse by meetings or otherwise, the So- ciety may establish sections for the members of the Atlantic coast, Pacific coast and Mississippi valley (or other) regions. Meetings within each sectional area may be arranged by the local sectional vice-president, and the members of the section may elect temporary officers, except the vice-president when present, and by a majority vote assess such local subscriptions as may be needed to carry on local work in addition to the regular annual fees. NOMINATIONS AND ELECTIONS.— Owing to the scattered distribution of the membership, voting may be by ballot mailed to the secretary, who shall an- nounce the result through the organ of the Society, in the number next follow- ing the limit fixed for counting the vote, but no votes by proxy shall be accepted. Nominations for officers may be made by any three members or associates, so as to be announced at least one month before the annual election in the So- ciety's organ. Nominations for membership may be made at any time, but at least one month before they are to be acted upon. The secretary, treasurer and members of the executive council shall be active or life members, and serve until the election of their successors. Elections shall be annual. The president, vice-presidents, secretary and treasurer shall 1 Members of the Brooklyn Club and some others think the annual dues would better be fixed at two or three dollars. % THE NAUTILUS. be ex-officio members of the Council. The term of office for the members of the Council (not ex-officio) shall be three years, but three members shall retire each year, and of the nine members elected to the Council at the first election three shall serve one year, three two years, and three the full term, the indi- viduals to be determined by lot ; after which three members shall be elected annually. THE COUNCIL . — The Council shall conduct the business of the Society, elect members, control expenditures, audit the treasurer's accounts, prescribe the duties of Secretary and Treasurer, make rules or by-laws to carry out the de- tails of the organization of the Society, and shall annually report to the So- ciety at least one month before the annual election. All new members or associates shall be elected by a majority vote of the Council, not less than five members constituting a quorum. ACTITE MEMBERS. — Active members shall be elected from those persons actively engaged in research, the collection, or the study of the Mollusca, and their qualifications shall be stated in the nomination papers. Associates may be any one of good character interested in the general subject or the study of natural history. Corresponding members shall be residents of foreign countries. OFFICIAL ORGAN. — The Council may select a periodical, not issued by the Society, as its official organ, and may from the annual fees pay such subscription for the several members and associates as may be arranged for with the pro- prietors of such periodical. AMENDMENTS TO THE CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS. — The constitution may be amended by a majority vote of the life and active members at any annual meeting, provided notice of the proposed amemdment shall have been given in the official organ at least three months previously. Amendments to the by- laws may be made at any meeting of the Council called for the purpose, at least one month's notice having been given to the members of the Council. PERMANENT FUNDS AND EXPENDITURES. — The sums paid in by patrons and life members shall be invested and constitute a permanent fund, of which the interest only shall be available for expenses as directed by the Council. All expenditures must be authorized and all investments approved by a vote of the Council, which shall have the Treasurer's accounts annually audited, the re- sult to be included in the annual report to the Society. Loss OF MEMBERSHIP. — Any member or associate two months in default in his annual subscription shall be notified by the Secretary, and any member or associate who shall be over one year in arrears shall, ipso facto, lose member- ship ; provided that, on a majority vote of the Council and payment of all ar- rearages, such member or associate may be reinstated without a formal re-election. THE NAUTILUS. Vox,. XXII. JANUARY, 19O8. No. 9. POMATIOPSIS ROBUSTA N. SP. BY BRYANT WALKER. Shell ovate-conic, perforate, smooth and shining, lines of growth subobsolete; light greenish-yellow becoming lighter towards the apex ; spire elevated, apex blunt, the initial whorl being perceptibly flattened. Whorls 5^, convex, with a well impressed suture, body whorl large and inflated. Aperture ovate, narrow above and well rounded below, between one-third and one-half of the length of the shell ; peritreme continuous and adnate to the parietal wall above the perforation ; lip sharp. Alt. fi, diam. 3^ mm. Jackson Lake, Wyoming. Type in the collection of A. A. Hinkley, Du Bois, 111. Although only a single specimen of this species was found, it is so obviously distinct from any of the known species of the genus, that I do not hesitate to describe it. It is a much stouter shell than P. hinkleyi and differs from both that and californica in the less convex whorls and less impressed suture. In these particulars it resembles more P. lapidaria, but differs from thai entirely in shape. The narrow perforation and sharp lip as well as the general contour easily separate it from P. cincinnatiensis . 98 THE NAUTILUS. A COLLECTING TEIP AT NORTHPORT, N. Y. BY WM. H. WEEKS, JR. It was my good fortune to have a vacation during the month of October, and I decided to go to Northport, in search of shells. Northport is situated on a fine harbor on the north shore of Long Island, some forty miles from New York City. The conchologist here has a fine field before him for work, and if not easily discour- aged, shore-collecting will yield good results. It usually means however long tramps each day of some five to ten miles. I expected to use the dredge but could not make satisfactory arrangements. It is here that the scallop (Pecten borealis) abounds, but this year only small quantities have been brought in by fishermen, and the much- prized red variety is decidedly scarce. Where I had found some five years ago countless numbers of Crepidula convexa on the beach not a specimen was to be seen, but a few were gathered at low tide from dead specimens of Litorina littorea and Nassa obsoleta. Mya arenaria were everywhere on the beach in fine order, and also many Ensis directus. Usually one has to dig for them. Ltzvicardium mortoni were found in small colonies and seemed to be larger than usual. Numerous odd valves of Astarte undulata were taken at low tide. It is evidently a deep- water species. No search was made for land shells. The following is a list of species obtained : Ostrea virgiuica Grael., cultivated extensively. Anomia simplex Orb., abundant. Pecten gibbus var. borealis Say, fairly common. Mytilus edulis Linn., abundant. Modiolus modiolus Linr., scarce. Modiolus demissa var. plicatula Lam., abundant. Area transversa Say, abundant. Area pexata Say, abundant. Astarte undata Gld., odd valves. Laevicardium mortoni Conr., fairly common. Venus mercenaria L., abundant. Petricola pholadiformis Lam., fairly common. Tellina tenera Say, one specimen. Macoma balthica Linn., scarce. THE NAUTILUS. 99 Ensis directus Conr., abundant. Spisula solidissima Dillw., fairly common. Mulinia lateralis Say, scarce. Lyonsia hyalina Conr., scarce. Mya arenaria Linn., common. Busycon canaliculata Say, fairly common. Busycon carica Gmel., fairly common. Nassa trivittata Say, fairly common. Nassa obsoleta Say, very abundant. Nassa vibex Say, scarce. Astyris lunata Say, scarce. Eupleura caudata Say, scarce. Urosalpinx cinereus Say, common. Odostomia trifida Totten, scarce. Bittium nigrum Stimp, common. Litorina rudis Donov., common. Litorina littorea Linn., very common. Crepedula fornicata Linn., common. Crepedula plana Say, common. Crepedula convexa Say, scarce. Neverita duplicata Say, fairly common. Chaetopleura apiculata Say, scarce (usually on oysters). A LIST OF THE LAND SHELLS OF LEE COUNTY, FLORIDA. BY E. G. VANATTA. The following species were collected in Lee County, Florida, by Mr. Clarence B. Moore. The smaller forms were picked from leaf- mould sent in bags, each with the exact locality carefully marked on it. Practically nothing has been known hitherto of the land-snail fauna between Key Marco and Cape Florida, the Ten Thousand Island region being accessible only to the collector cruising in his own boat. It is interesting to note the occurrence of Bifidaria rhoadsi Pils. and Vertigo variolosa Gld. on the west coast of Florida ; also that many of the shells of Zonitoides minuscula Binn. have internal 100 THE NAUTILUS. laminae or teeth. The use of the name Euglandina rosea Fer. in- stead of Glandina truncata has been explained by Dr. Pilsbry in the last number of the Manual of Conchology, p. 191. All the speci- mens listed are in the collection of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. Blue Hill Id., near Goodland Point, Marco Key. Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. Thysanophora selenina Gld. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Polygyra uvulifera Shutt. Drymaeus multilineatus Say. Euglandina rosea Fer. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Buttonwood Key. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Zonitoides singleyana Pils. Chokoloskee Key. Pupoides modicus Gld. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Dismal Key. Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. Helicina orbiculata Say. Thysanophora plagioptycha Shutt. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Strobilops hubbardi A. D. Brown. Pupoides modicus Gld. Bifidaria rhoadsi Pils. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Microceramus floiidanus Pils. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Vitrea dalliana ' Simpson ' Pilsbry. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Zonitoides singleyana Pils. THE NAUTILUS. 101 Fakahatcliee Key. Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. Helicina orbiculata Say. Thysanophora selenina Gld. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Pupoides modicus Gld. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Microceramus floridanus Pils ? (young). Drymaeus (young multilineatus Say ?) Drymagus dominions Rve. Euglandina rosea Fer. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Vitrea dalliana ' Simp.' Pils. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Georgia Fruit Company's land, S. of Marco. Praticolella jejuna Say. Vitrea dalliana ' Simp.' Pils. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Gilberts (near Matanzas Pass). Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Pupoides modicus Gld. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Vitrea dalliana ' Simp.' Pils. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Zonitoides singleyana Pils. Goodland Point, Marco Key. Polygyra c. f. carpenteriana Bid. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Euglandina rosea Fer. (near parallela Biun.) Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Succinea floridana Pils. Little Marco. Truncatella caribasensis succinea C. B. Ad. Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. 102 THE NAUTILUS. Helicina orbiculata Say. Helicina orbiculafa var. clappi Pils. Mas. Thysanophora plagioptycha Shutt. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Polygyra uvulifera Shutt. Bifidaria contracta Say. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Vertigo variolosa Gld. Microceramus floridanus Pils. Euglandina r. parallela Binn. Vitrea indentata Say. Vitrea dalliana ' Siinp ' Pils. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Zonitoides singleyana Pils. Marco, N. end of Marco Key Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Euglandina rosea Fer. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Vitrea dalliana ' Simp.' Pils. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Mound Key, Estero Bay. Truncatella caribseensis succinea C. B. Ad. Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. Helicina orbiculata Say. Thysanophora plagioptycha Shutt. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid Pupoides modicus Gld. Bifidaria contracta Say. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Euglandina rosea minor Binn. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Succinea floridana Pils. THE NAUTILUS. 103 Nameless Key (Mr. Addison's) two miles east of Marco. Helicina orbiculata Say. Thysanophora selenina Gld. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Pupoides modicus Gld. Bifidaria contracta Say. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Microceramus floridanus Pils. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Vitrea dalliana ' Simp ' Pils. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Zonitoides singleyana Pils. Near Punta Rassa. Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. Polygyra cereolus f. volvoxis Pfr. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Aboriginal shell- heap about one mile east of St. James, Pine Island. Truncatella clathrus Lowe. Truncatella cariba?ensis ' Sby. ' Rve. Truncatella caribaeensis succinea C. B. Ad. Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. Praticolella jejuna Say. Polygyra cereolus f. volvoxis Pfr. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. Zonitoides singleyana Pils. Pine land, N. "W. end of Pine Island. Helicina orbiculata Say. Bifidaria contracta Say. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Euglandina rosea Fer. near var. parallela Binn. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. 104 THE NAUTILUS. N. E. end Pine Island, Lee Co., Florida. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Russell's Key. Helicina orbiculata Say. Helicina orbiculata var. clappi Pils. Mss. Thysanophora selenina Gld. Thysanophora plagioptycha Shutt. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Pupoides modicus Gld. Bifidaria p. hordeacella Pils. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Microceramus floridanus Pils. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Guppya gundlaclii Pfr. Zonitoides arborea Say. Zonitoides singleyana Pils. Turner Place, Turner River (a key near Chokoloskee). Truncatella bilabiata Pfr. Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Polygyra uvulifera Shutt. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Microceramus floridanus Pils. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Vitrea indentata Say. Zonitoides minuscula Binn. About five miles up Whitney River (mainland). Polygyra cereolus f. carpenteriana Bid. Bifidaria rupicola Say. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Guppya gundlachi Pfr. "Wiggins' Key, Sandfly Pass. Euglandina rosea parallela Binn. Lossman's Key. Euglandina rosea minor Binn. THE NAUTILUS. 105 CANCELLABLE OBTUSA DESH. BY SLOMAN ROUS. Among some shells handed to me by my friend Mr. D. W. Ferguson, of Brooklyn, is a specimen of Cancellaria obtusa Desh. Tryon writing in 1885 says (Man. of Conch., Vol. VII, p. 68) : " The unique specimen formed part of the Cumingian collection. Hab. unknown." As far as I am aware no other specimen has since been recorded, and it seems worth while to note the appear- ance of another specimen and at the same time to amplify the some- what meager description given in the Manual. The specimen is unfortunately what is called a dead shell but it retains its color and is perfect, its principal imperfection being a worm groove in the aperture, but this in no way detracts from show- ing its characteristics and the species can be perfectly described from the specimen. Spire much depressed, regularly spirally costate, the ridges flattened, the intervening grooves about half the width of the ridges, growth lines somewhat obsolete, but deeply pitted where they cross the spiral grooves; light yellowish-brown; whorls three; rather narrowly umbilicate, columellar plications three, the inferior some- what obsolete, upper part of aperture very heavily calloused, aper- ture white. Lon. 24, lat. 18 mm. Hab. Panama. Mr. Ferguson received this specimen with a number of other species from Mr. McNeill, well known as a collector of shells of Central America, Panama, etc. All were labeled Panama, and all the other species were undoubtedly Panama shells. I think there is but little doubt but that this habitat will prove correct. NOTES. MUREX CARPENTERI, FORM ALBA — During the past year the fishermen of Newport, Orange County, California, have brought up a number of specimens of Murex carpenteri Ball, in their nets. Most of them are the ordinary form, but among them are two or three specimens of a pure white color, showing little or none of the usual brownish coloration so characteristic of the species. This is a really beautiful variation, but as yet it seems to be very rare. Ac- 106 THE NAUTILUS. cording to the usual custom, this form may be referred to as the form or variety alba — S. S. BERRY. TRITON GIBBOSUS BROD., IN CALIFORNIA. — Ralph Arnold in The Paleontology and Stratigraphy of San Pedro, quotes the range of the living T. gibbosus as West Tropical America and Panama. At this time Dr. Dall supposed that a single example from San Pedro Bay had been washed from the fossil beds on the beach. Another writer reports the species from San Pedro Bay (see NAUTILUS, Vol. VII, p. 75). At the time I brought the La Jolla material together (NAUTILUS, September, 1907), three speci- mens were secured by Miss Mary A. Williams, Joshua L. Baily and myself. These were not included in the L. J. list, as at the time the identity was doubtful. The species can now safely rank in the fauna of the state — MAXWELL SMITH. SHELLS OF THE LAKE REGION OF MAINE — The following mol- lusks were collected at Capens, Deer Island, Moosehead Lake, dur- ing July, 1907 : Polygyra fraterna Say, P. albolabris Say, P. sayana Pils., P. dentifera Binn., Vitrea hammonis Strom., Euconulus fulvus Mull., Zonitoides arborea Say, Pyramidula alternata Say, P. cronk- hitei anthonyi Pils., Sjihyradium edentulum Drap., Succinea ovalis totteniana Lea, Philomycus carolinensis Bosc., and Planorbis bicar- inatus Say. — C. W. JOHNSON. MOLLUSCA OF LA JOLLA, CALIFORNIA. — To the lists which have appeared in the NAUTILUS, the following nuclibranchs may be added : Chromodoris macfarlandi Ckll. Forms a distinct subgenus or genus. Chromodoris calif orniensis Bergh (universitatis Ckll.). Archidoris montereyensis Cooper (?). Specimens immature. Cadlinaflavomaculata McFarl. Cadlina marginata McFarl. (?). Specimens small. Doridopsis nigromaculata C. & E. (vidua Bergh, var. (?). Thecacera velox Ckll. Several others have been found at San Pedro and San Diego, and, therefore, may be expected at La Jolla. In the Journal of Malacology, 1905, p. 42, is given a brief account of a new Triopha from San Pedro. No specific name was offered, because the notes on the external characters had been mislaid. THE NAUTILUS. 107 These have now been recovered, and the animal may take the name originally given in MS., Triopha aurantiaca. It is close to T. car- penteri Stearns, in external characters, but instead of being white it is orange, with the appendages tipped with vermilion. — T. D. A. COCKERELL. HENRY VENDRYES. Mr. Henry Vendryes, well known to students of the Jamaican fauna, died at Kingston, Jamaica, Nov. 20, 1907, in his 86th year. Mr. Vendryes was of French extraction, his father having served with Napoleon, and was born on the island Oct. 30, 1822. He be- came a student of law with Donald Campbell, a noted solicitor of that day. After making a temporary experiment as a business man, he soon returned to his first choice. In 1879 he was appointed an advocate of the Supreme Court, and was offered but declined the position of resident magistrate on the island. He distinguished him- self in private practice of the law, and was for a time the editor of a local paper now extinct, the " Colonial Standard." His accomplish- ments in music were exceptional, but it is as a conchologist and the friend of conchological students interested in the Jamaican fauna that the readers of the NAUTILUS will chiefly remember him. He contributed largely to the cabinets of Adams, Chitty, Bland, Guppy and others as their publications show, and was most courteous and generous in extending aid to all who were interested in his special science. He leaves a large family connection. He suffered serious financial losses by the Kingston earthquake, and his uniquely com- plete collection of Jamaican shells and fossils has been offered for sale, particulars of which can be learned from his late partner and son-in-law, Mr. R. W. Bryant, of Kingston. "W. H. DALL. SOME PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS OF HENRY VENDRYES. BY J. B. HENDERSON, JR. The news of Henry Vendryes' death in Kingston, Jamaica, a few weeks ago has awakened many pleasant memories of his personality. On our collecting trips to Jamaica, Mr. Simpson and I always paid our respects to this veteran conchologist, and we passed many pleas- 108 THE NAUTILUS. ant hours in his " shell room " inspecting his large collections and enjoying his generous hospitality. Mr. Vendryes was then — ten years ago — an old man carrying somewhat unsteadily the weight of seventy-five years, but he radi- ated about him the indefinable charm of the gentleman of the old school. He talked freely of days in the field with C. B. Adams, Chitty and Gloyne, those forefathers of Jamaican conchology, and the spirit of their work and methods remained with him, for he evolved with difficulty from that conchological era when every roundish land shell was a Helix, and every marine shell with a long canal stood firmly on the name of Fusus. The large collections which he brought together were almost wholly made up of Jamaican and Haitan forms both marine and land. They were large and of undoubted scientific value, although their beauty was marred by the presence of too many dead and worn specimens of the commoner species which he seemingly lacked the courage to throw away. His shells were mounted upon glass slides the specimens fixed by cement and the names and localities painted upon the glass in white. What appeared to be a most unsatisfactory cabinet method he assured me was made necessary in that tropical climate by the swarms of insect pests which would relish paper trays and labels. Owing to the lack of modern titles in his library Mr. Vendryes was much handicapped in his literary labors. He acknowledged the necessity of anatomical work and fully approved of the more modern methods of biological research, but before such a task as applied by himself to his collections he sank back exhausted. Notwithstanding such discouragements Mr. Vendryes published an excellent list of Jamaica shells which is to-day the best we have, and he also had in preparation the great undertaking of a monograph of the most exhaustive kind, of the Jamaican fauna. He gave me a section of this MS of literally hundreds of pages of closely written (in his own hand) observations, critical notes, descriptions, synon- omy, etc., and asked me to find a publisher for it in the United States. The preparation of this unpublished monograph involving as it must have done an enormous amount of physical as well as mental effort, was, after all, a labor of love, and from the way he handled the MS it was apparent how he loved the monument he was with such infinite pains building for himself. THE NAUTILUS. VOL. XXII. FEBRUARY, 1908. No. 1O. HYGROMIA HISPIDA (LINNJEUS) IN MAINE. BY N. W. LERMOND. In 1904 I found a snail considerably smaller in size than Polygyra frnterna Say, and very numerous on walls of old lime quarries, on wooden sidewalks and on the under sides of rocks from the lime quarries at Rockland, Knox County, Maine. Specimens sent Dr. Pilsbry for identification were pronounced by him Hygromia hispida (Linn.), and the first record for this species for the state of Maine. In his 1898 list of " Land Shells of America North of Mexico," on page 3, Prof. Pilsbry gives Hygromia hispida (Linn.) as found at Quebec and Levis, Quebec, Canada — " a species of northern Europe, imported." In 1905 I found them quite as plentiful in and about old lime quarries at Thomaston, and in 1906 collected them in a garden in the same town under cabbage plants. They literally " swarmed " on the ground and on the under side of the cabbage heads. This garden is on the banks of " Mill River," and near a lime kiln. This season I found them just as numerous — and they are by far the most abundant species in this locality — in the Rockland and Thomaston localities, but have not as yet found them elsewhere in the county, although they quite likely are already established in the lime quarries of Camden and Rockport. 110 THE NAUTILUS. 09 CERTAIN IMMATURE AHCULOS2E. BT BRYANT WALKER. Anculosa prarosa was described by Say in 1824 from specimens collected at the falls of the Ohio. In the following year he de- scribed a second species from the north fork of the Holston River in Virginia as A. subglobosa. In 1838 Dr. Lea described a very small bicarinate species from Cincinnati as A. cincinnatiensis, and, in 1845, another species from " Tennessee and Tuscaloosa, Ala.," as A. tintinnabulum. Tryon in his preliminary " Synonymy of the Strepomatidae " (1865) stated that cincinnatiensis was " undoubtedly the quite young of prarosa," and placed tintinnabulum as a variety under subglobosa. He considered A. virgata Lea, a small, smooth, rounded form, to be the young of tintinnabulum and A. globula Lea, a very similar but more globose shell, the immature form of subglobosa. In 1871, Dr. James Lewis published a paper in the American Journal of Conchology (VI, p. 216) on the shells of the Holston River, in which he identified a small bicarinate form from that river as A. cincinnatiensis, and, by a series of specimens graded in size, satisfied himself that this form was the young of Lea's tintinnabulum. He further states that " some of the varieties (so-called) of An- culosa prarosa have bicarinate young, but their forms are such that when the dimensions of Mr. Lea's typical cincinnatiensis (diameter .16 inch) they do not exactly, but only approximately, correspond thereto, and therefore must yield to the claims of titinnabulum." Dr. Lewis did not specify the peculiar characteristics of the young of A. prterosa, as distinguished from the young of tintinnabulum, beyond stating that the species is extremely variable and that " in one variety carinas are scarcely discernible in the smallest specimens. In others there are traces of carinse upon shells of nearly or quite ^ inch in diameter." In regard to A. subglobosa he described the young as " smooth, shining, depressed, subglobose, with a somewhat pointed, elevated apex," and states that in his numerous series of that species " none are carinate, nor can I find any evidence by which I might identify tubglobosa with tintinnabulum." His conclusion therefore was that Lea's cincinnatiensis was the THE NAUTILUS PLA'IE X. 7. 3. 8. 10. 11. 4. WALKER- YOUNG STAGES OF ANCULOSA. THE NAUTILUS. Ill very young of a valid species distinct from both prarosa and sub- globosa, of which A. tintinnabulum was the adult form. Subsequently Tryon reviewed Dr. Lewis' paper (Am. Jour, of Con., VII, p. 86) and, without discussing at all the facts on which the latter bad based his conclusions, reiterated his former conclu- sions, stating that Mr. Anthony did not find tintinnabulum in the Ohio, but did find cincinnatiensis, and satisfied himself that it was the young of prarosa and that he, himself, had examined " thou- sands of specimens from many localities " and was " fully convinced that subglobosa and tintinnabulum are the same species." And this position was maintained in his elaborate monograph of the Strepo- matida published by the Smithsonian Institution in 1873. Since then, so far as I have been able to ascertain, nothing has been published on the subject. It is obvious that, if these different forms of Anculosa exhibit as claimed by Lewis persistent and characteristic differences in the young shell, a valuable standard of comparison can be established, which will, when thoroughly worked out, enable us to definitely determine their relationships and their claims to specific or varietal recognition. And although, for a complete solution of the questions of synonymy involved, full suites of all ages of all the different forms would be necessary, any detailed information will be of value, both as leading the way towards the final settlement of the matter and as an incentive to further investigation and systematic work in the field for the acquisition of the material still necessary for successful results. For these reasons, the following notes have been compiled and, with full recognition of the fact that they are necessarily in- complete and quite insufficient for any broad generalizations and are of value only so far as they deal with material under observation, are published with the hope that they may lead others to review the material in their possession and incite additional effort toward securing the missing links. I. ANCULOSA PR^EROSA SAY. PI. X., figs. 1-6. Unfortunately I have not been able to obtain any of the minute young of this species from the Ohio River, the smallest specimens seen having passed the carinate stage. But from a comparison of these with those of corresponding size and development from a very complete series of all sizes, ranging from .0125 mm. in diameter to 112 THE NAUTILUS, yj the fully matured shell, from the Tennessee river at Florence, Ala., collected by Mr. A. A. Hinkley, there seems to be no doubt but that the changes in growth of the two series have been identical. The minute young in the Florence series have the apical whorls carinate and the body-whorl bicarinate. I have no difficulty in identifying this form with Lea's cincinnaliensis. The type had four whorls and measured 4 mm. in height by 3.5 in diameter. As a standard for comparison I have selected an individual of exactly these dimensions (Fig. 1); although most of the specimens of that diameter are more depressed, the altitude and width being substan- tially the same. This specimen agrees with the original diagnosis in every par- ticular with one exception. Lea states that the type had three bands and that the two carinas were colored. Whether the three bands included the two carinal bands, he does not say. All of my specimens, with one exception, exhibit four bands within the aper- ture. Two are carinal, one is between the upper carina and the suture, and the fourth between the lower carina and the umbilical depression. These bands are continuous or broken into spots, and sometimes the upper and lower pairs are more or less confluent. The exception has only the upper pair of bands, the lower carina and basal area being uncolored. I do not regard the variation in banding of any material importance and, therefore, have no hesitation in proceeding on the assumption that these bicarinate individuals are the cincinnatiensis of Lea. As shown by Fig. 1, the typical form of A. cincinnatiensis has four whorls ; the spire is acutely conical, its whorls flattened and bounded below by the pro- jecting carina, the suture of the succeeding whorls being on the under side of the carina and slightly within the outer edge ; the body whorl is strongly bicarinate, flattened above the superior carina, concave between the carinae and with the basal arc area flattened and very oblique. The shell is rather translucent, light horn-color, more or less tinged with green; apex is red, lighter than the supracarinal band, and the bands dark reddish-brown ; the superior band is broad and on the apical whorls fills nearly the en- tile space between the carina and the suture, so that the whorls appear wholly dark colored ; the basal band is broad, the color ex- tending to same degree over the entire umbilical area; the columella is more or less tinged with purple. The aperture is large " rounded," THE NAUTILUS. 113 but slightly modified, however, by the carinae. The nepionic whorl is smooth, or very slightly and irregularly roughened or pitted; this perhaps may be the result of incipient erosion. Below this, the lines of growth on the second and third whorls are strong, straight and quite regular, and intersecting these are numerous stronger, parallel, revolving striae, which give a reticulated appearance to the surface ; on the fourth whorl the revolving lines sensibly diminish in strength and towards the aperture become subobsolete. This sculpture is uniformly present and is apparently characteristic of the bicarinate form. The persistence of the revolving lines varies in different individuals. Usually they fade out as the shell assumes the globose form, but occasionally continue until the shell is nearly mature. There is considerable variation in the height of the apical whorls. Most of the specimens in the bicarinate stage are more depressed than the type and the carina is less prominent on the superior whorls. Fig. 2 is the most depressed individual seen, and the spire is wholly flattened with no projection of the carina above the body whorl. As the shell increases in size, the superior carina becomes less prominent, the lip of the lower whorl rises and gradually passes over its edge, and, thenceforth, the shallow suture characteristic of the mature shell is maintained. Erosion begins, the acute spire and, generally, all the sculptured whorls disappear, and the shell assumes the characteristic globular shape of maturity. During this stage, the carince progressively diminish in strength and become mere angles and finally disappear. The groove between them widens and becomes plane and persists in the half-grown and mature shells as the characteristic flattening of the body whorl. The superior carina is the less persistent and completely disappears in the regularly rounded curve of the upper part of the whorl. The lower carina and the resulting angle remain longer in evidence and cause in the mature shell the greater width of the lower part of the body whorl. The carinre persist longer in the more conical speci- mens (Fig. 4) than in the depressed individuals (Fig. 3). For comparison with this stage in the Florence series, the smallest ex- ample seen from the Falls of Ohio is figured (Fig. 5). It measures 5.5x5.5 mm. The apical whorls are somewhat eroded, but enough is left to show that they were carinate and had the characteristic sculpture ascribed to cincinnatiensis. They are more depressed 114 THE NAUTILUS. than any of the Florence series, and the body whorl ia much more gibbous. This feature is still more emphasized in a small series of prcerosa from the Ohio at Golconda, Ills., also collected by Mr. Hinkley. In these (Fig. 6), as the shell advances beyond the bicarinate stage, the lip passes over the superior carina and overlaps the preceding whorl, forming a slight shoulder around it, so that upon the completion of an entire whorl, the spire appears, as it were, in a flattened depression with the short, apical elevation in the centre. Whether this is constant in the prcerosa of the Ohio, the series under examination is too small to establish. But the simi- larity of the specimen from the Falls of the Ohio (the type locality) suggests that it may be. It is very desirable that a full series of all sizes from the Ohio should be examined, so that the manner of growth of the typical form may be definitely determined. By a careful selection of the less eroded specimens, the whole process of growth can be traced from the typical bicarinate form of the young to the smooth rotundity of the adult shell and there is apparently no question but that the cincinnatiensis of Lea is the young of the prcerosa of Say. II. ANCULOSA SUBGLOBOSA Say. This species, in some localities at least, seems to be less subject to erosion than its associated species of the genus; and specimens nearly if not quite mature, with perfect apices, are not uncommon. The tracing of the growth of the shell from the early stages to maturity is, therefore, a matter of comparative ease. The series of young shells in the Lewis collection, of which the smallest (Fig. 9) measures alt. 3.25, diam. 3.55 mm., with one ex- ception, is very uniform, and there can be no doubt but that they are the young of the typical form as figured by Tryon (Mon. figs. 799 and 800). They are gibbous, translucent, light horn-color, unicol- ored or banded, smooth and shining, apex acutely conical, the tip tinged with dark brown, whorls rounded, suture well impressed, with no trace of any carina whatever. The shell increases very rapidly in size, but retains its peculiar form until nearly mature. For com- parison with Figs. 3 and 8 a larger specimen (5x5 mm.) is also fig- ured (Fig. 10). The exception above noted (Fig. 11) is quite different in shape and would seem to be specifically distinct. It measures 5.5x5 mm., THE NAUTILUS. 115 and is of a light greenish-yellow and much more globular than the others and barring the bands, which are three instead of two as called for by the original description, has great resemblance to A. globula of Lea. The aperture is almost exactly two-thirds of the length of the shell. Among a small set from the Holston at Knox- ville, Tennessee, collected by Mr. A. C. Billups, are larger speci- mens (10x8.5 mm.) of the same form, but I have been unable to trace it with entire satisfaction to maturity. It is, however, appar- ently the immature form of the species that Dr. Lewis identified with the A. virgata of Lea. But whatever the relation of the form to subglobosa may be, it agrees with it in its smooth, shining, rounded whorls with no impressed spiral lines and no carinae. III. A. TINTINNABULUM Lea. Dr. Lewis' series of this species is very complete and as he states, there can be no question but that the bicarinate form that he identi- fied with Lea's cincinnatiensis is the young of tintinnabulum. But they are quite different from the true cincinnatiensis if I am right in my identification of that form, and seem to be specifically distinct. Compared with cincinnatiensis of the same size, these shells (Figs. 7 and 8) have a more elevated spire and are much thicker, being quite opaque and noticeably more heavily moulded ; the surface of the whorls above the superior carina is decidedly convex above and excavated below as it approaches the carina, so that on the third and fourth whorls there is a well-developed groove immediately behind the carina ; the carinae are much stronger, the superior projects upwards rather than laterally, and is formed more by the excavation of the upper surface of the whorl behind the uplift of the intercari- nal area, than by the lateral projection of the carina, as in cincin- natiensis ; the lower carina is much stronger and projects laterally ; the intercarinal area is relatively wider and very flat, being scarcely at all concave ; the basal area is much more excavated immediately below the inferior carina. While color is, perhaps, the least re- liable factor in specific distinction in Anculosa, in this series it is remarkably uniform and very striking. The shells are uniformly light greenish-yellow with two broad reddish-brown bands on the body whorl, one above the superior carina and the other on the basal area immediately below the inferior carina ; the apical whorls are reddish-brown ; the intercarinal area has no band, the carin* are 116 THE NAUTILUS. noticeably lighter in color than the rest of the shell and stand out conspicuously against the dark bands above and below them. As the shell grows, the superior band widens and invades the region of the superior carina, sometimes before it has entirely disappeared, and occasionally divides into two narrow bands, the basal band persists and in the adult the space between them represents the intercarinal area of the young shell. The spiral lines are uniformly present and rather stronger than in cincinnatiensis and apparently persist longer as the shell approaches maturity. As the shell increases in size, the superior carina diminishes and finally disappears entirely ; the lower carina persists much longer, descends somewhat in position and becomes a characteristic feature of the half-grown shell and, in the adult, causes the bell-shaped form which gives to the species its specific name. IV. CONCLUSIONS. From the examination of the material as above detailed, the fol- lowing conclusions may be drawn. 1. That in these species of Anculosa at least, the very young shells have characteristics which are constant and available for specific distinction. 2. That the young shell of A. prserosa is bicarinate and spirally striate and was described by Lea as A. cincinnatiensis. 3. That the young shell of A. subglobosa is ecarinate and without spiral, impressed lines. 4. That the young shell of A. tintinnabulum is bicarinate and spirally striate, but specifically different from Lea's cincinnatiensis. 5. That A. tintinnabulum Lea is specifically distinct from both A. prserosa and A. subylobosa, and is a valid species. 6. That collectors and especially those in the field should give special attention to securing full suites of all the species of all ages, particularly the very young, so that the exact relations of all the described species may be definitely determined. EXPLANATION OF PLATE X. All the figures are on the same scale, X 48. Fig. 1-4. A. prserosa Say — Tennessee River, Florence, Ala. Fig. 5. A. prcerosa — Falls of the Ohio. THE NAUTILUS. 117 Fig. 6. A. prxrosa — Ohio River, Golconda, Ills. Fig. 7-8. A. tintinnobulum Lea — Holston River, Tenn. Fig. 9-10. A. subglobosa Say — Holston River, Tenn. Fig. 11. A. globula Lea? — Holston River, Tenn. A NEW SPECIES OF PYRGULOPSIS. BY A. A. HINKLEY. The finding of a new species of Pyrgulopsis is a surprise, coming as it does from such a well-known stream as the Wabash, a river which has furnished many forms of shells found nowhere else north of the Ohio river, though common in southern streams. There was found associated with the new species Somatogyrus strengi Pilsbry and Walker, a recently described southern species, which adds another to that list of, shall we call it freak geographical distribution? or is there some known cause for the occurence of southern forms in the Wabash ? It seems a little strange that no species of shells bears the name of the Wabash river. The writer thinks now a good time to nse the name. PYRGULOPSIS WABASHENSIS, n. sp. The shell is imperforate, pupiform, smooth, horn-colored ; growth lines faint ; composed of five convex whorls separated by an im- pressed suture. The periphery is rounded or slightly angular. The aperture oblique, ovate, angular above, rounded below. The colu- mella a little reflected. Columellar callus thickened ; on the parietal wall the outside edge straight and raised. Length .12, diam. .06 of an inch. Found in shallow water of the Wabash river, at the Chains in Posey county, Indiana, by the writer's son, George Hinkley. Com- pared with P. mississippitnsis this species is smaller, has not the angular or carinate body whorl, the spire is not so acutely conical, and the aperture is not as wide. The mississipiensis is conical with flat whorls ; this species is pupiform with rounded whorls. Some examples of wabashensis have a slight shoulder on the penultimate whorl just above the suture, others have an impressed line on the body whorl a little distance below the suture. 118 THE NAUTILUS. Examples are in the collections of the Academy of Natural Science, Philadelphia ; The National Museum ; The Chicago Academy of Science, Mr. Bryant Walker, and the writer. NOTES ON SOME AUSTRALIAN UNIONIDJE. BY L. S. FRIERSON. A series of shells covering nearly the whole range of species credited to Australia having been received from the well-known conchologist, Mr. Wm. T. Bednall of Adelaide, reveals several inter- esting points, which may constitute as many " addenda and corri- genda " to Mr. C. T. Simpson's " Synopsis of the Naiades." Page 891. Unio bednaUi Tate was described in 1882, Proceed- ings Royal Society of South Australia, page 56. The shell, as evidenced by notes, and a fine series of specimens from Mr. Bednall, is not a form of Diplodon australis (Lam.) Hanley, but is much nearer to D. wilsonii Lea (= stuarti Adams and Angas). A speci- men of bednalli is over 3^ inches long by 1| high, whereas a speci- men of D. australis var. legrandi (an elongated variety) is 3 inches long and 2 inches high). D. bednalli Tate therefore should be removed as a synonym of australis, and restored to specific rank, from whence, should it ever be degraded, it must fall under D. wil~ sonii Lea, as a variety. A series of shells labeled U. angasii Lea revealed the follow- ing facts : U. angasii, credited to MSS. of Lea, was described by Sowerby in Conchologia Iconica, and placed by Mr. Simpson as a synonym of D. shuttleworthii Lea. A casual observation of the lot seemed to indicate two species. A critical study of both the actual specimens with the original descriptions of both species confirmed this impression. Diplodon shuttleworthii Lea (besides being appar- ently larger) has a deeply and coarsely sulcated disc, and is covered with a heavy, thick, scaly epidermis resembling that of D. cucumoides. On the other hand the D. angasii Sowerby is apparently a smaller species, is much thinner, with a smooth surface and covered with a thin epidermis, with nothing more than fine sulcations, scarcely noticeable. But as a final clincher, a young specimen of D. angdsii (having beaks so perfect as to show the glochidial shell) shows a THE NAUTILUS. 119 beak having not a trace of radial sculpture, but only a fine, concen- tric sulcation. Hence the shell not only is not D. sfiuttleworthit, but strictly speaking is not even a Diplodon. The beaks of D. shuttle- worthii have " strongly, irregularly radiate, curved bars." Mr. Bednall was unable to procure for me a single example of D. vittatus Lea, or D. evansii A. & A., or of D, wilsonii, having un- eroded beaks. But from the general similarity of the shells, it is, I believe, more than probable that a subgenus composed of these and possibly other Australian shells, having concentric beak sculpture or none, should be made and the definition of Diplodon be correspond- ingly broadened. NOTES. NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS — Among the amendments to the Postal Laws and Regulations, to take effect Jan. 1, 1908, is the following — *' a reasonable time will be allowed publishers to secure renewal of subscriptions, but unless subscriptions are expressly renewed after the term for " which they are paid within the following periods : [monthlies within four months] they shall not be counted in the legitimate list of subscribers." Subscribers will confer a great favor by paying promptly. A bill is sent when subscription is due. H. A. P., C. W. J. PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED A NEW PTEROPOD FROM NEW ENGLAND. — By C. H. Danforth, (Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. xxxiv, pp. 1-19, pi. 1-4). This new pteropod, Pxdoclione doliiformis, which also proves to be a new genus, was taken in the plankton of Casco Bay, Me., on the nights of Aug. 28 and Sept. 5, 6, 7 and 8, 1902. On a hasty ex- amination it was referred to a larva of some gymnosomatous pteropod. Later, in making some sections, they were found to be sexually matured adults. " This genus does not properly fall under any established family although perhaps it approaches most nearly the Clionidse, from which it differs in having an odd number of cephalocones and in having the entire posterior part of the body filled by the viscera." The species is described as : " Transparent ; 120 THE NAUTILUS. barrel-shaped ; small, about 1.5 mm. in length ; head when expanded elliptical in outline ; anterior ciliated band broken up into segments ; expanded parapodia (wings) flat, long-ovate ; middle lobe of foot rather large." The author gives a very exhaustive account of ita general features, musculature, digestive and nervous systems, heart and nephridium, and the reproductive system. The paper is illus- trated by four plates and two figures in the text — C. W. J. THE HALIOTIS OR ABALONE INDUSTRY OF THE CALTFORNIAN COAST. — By Mrs. M. Burton Williamson (Am. Hist. Soc. S. Cal., vol. vii, pp. 22-30, 1907). An exceedingly interesting account of this important industry. The law protecting these shells is like the law protecting the lobster on the Atlantic. The young are pro- tected but those which produce young are not. The author asks the pertinent question — " If these mollusks are destroyed as soon as old enough to propagate, of what use to the State is the preservation of the young ? " The present method in time can only lead to their extermination. The shells should be protected at least during their breeding period. — C. W. J. THE MOLLTJSCA OF MAST HEAD REEF, CAPRICORN GROUP, QUEENSLAND, Pt. II. — By C. Hedley (Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, vol. 32, pp. 476-513, pis. 16-21, 1907). In this paper 37 new species are described and beautifully figured. A list containing some 447 species from this reef, procured within a week, in a six- mile radius from one spot, shows the richness of the fauna. THE PYRAMIDELLID MOLLUSKS OF THE OREGONIAN FAUNAL AREA — By WILLIAM H. DALL and PAUL BARTSCH (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XXXIII, pp. 491-534, pis. 44-48, 1907). The species described in this paper have been selected from a monograph of West American Pyramidellidoe upon which the authors have been at work for some time, but which has been unavoidably delayed. The Oregonian Fauna! Area includes the region extending from the northern limit of the Alexander Archipelago southward along the coast to Pt. Conception, Cal. Thirty-eight new forms are described and beautifully figured together with many others already known imperfectly from this region — C. W. J. THE NAUTILUS. VOL. XXI. MARCH, 1908. No. 11. MOLLUSCAN FAUNA OF THE SAN BERNARDINO MOUNTAINS, CALIFORNIA. BY S. 8. BERRY. In view of the extraordinary researches carried on in the neigh- borincr regions of Arizona and New Mexico by Messrs. Ashmun, O O «/ Ferriss, Pilsbry, and other recent collectors, the writer has often wondered what might be the result of an equally diligent effort in the mountain ranges of Southern California. But little work seems to have been done in the region, and reports on that little are scat- tered and fragmentary. During the month of August, 1907, the writer spent two weeks camping in the San Bernardino Mountains, California, arid although he had other business on hand than the advancement of a hobby, he kept his eyes open for mollusks, and is thus enabled to add another fragment to the records. The San Bernardino Mountains range in height from about five thousand to nearly twelve thousand feet above sea-level, and abound in grand and beautiful scenery. Extending, as they do in an easterly-westerly direction, the northern slope of the mountains drains into the Mojave Desert, the southern into the Pacific. No mollusks whatever were found in the desert drainage, but the writer was able to give only a superficial examination to all but one or two spots, and has no doubt but that his collections represent a far from complete index to the life of the region. The canons and higher regions are well wooded, but the soil is 122 THE NAUTILUS. generally dry at this time of the year, although there are numerous brooks and rills, with here and there an open swampy meadow or cienaga. Bear Lake is a partly natural, partly artificial reservoir, some five or six miles long by perhaps a half a mile wide, and about sixty-five hundred feet above sea-level. It is the home of multitudes of small forms, most of them being species of wide distribution. High up on the mountain to the south of the lake is Bluff Lake, a small summer resort, at an altitude of 7,550 feet. In this case the " Lake " is only a large cienaga with a swamp at its lower end. This swamp, with the creek which flows from it, proved a very interesting locality, while all the land mollusks seen on the trip were found either under sticks and logs at the edge of the meadow or nearby in the woods. It is notable that none of the larger Helices were found, although Glyptostorna newberryanum should occur here just as it does in the neighboring San Gabriel Range, and I have seen living specimens of Epiphragmophora tudiculata W. G. B. from the base of these mountains. A list of the species obtained is herewith appended : Pisidium californicum Newcomb (?). Two " somewhat different forms " were thus determined by Dr. Sterki, who says that P. cali- fornicum itself is somewhat in doubt. They occur together, and are rather common in the quieter pools of Bluff Lake Creek, in ditches in the meadow, and in the swamp. A number of minute Pisidia found in a spring on a nearby hill- side are probably young of the same. Pisidium (sp. ?). Two specimens from the swamp are of" differ- ent shape from the remainder," according to Dr. Sterki, but whether or not distinct he was unable to say. Musculium raymondi J. G. Cooper. Found commonly in the swamp, and rather rarely in the creek at Bluff Lake. Valvata (sincera, Say ?) var. Bluff Lake Swamp (two speci- mens) and in Bear Lake, where it seems fairly common on and under stones. Lymncea palustris Mull. A small variety of this species occurs commonly in Bear Lake. It is extremely variable, generally tend- ing toward the form called nuttalliana by Lea. The maximum longitude of the numerous specimens collected in Bear Lake is but about ten millimeters. THE NAUTILUS. 123 Lymnxa palustris nuttalliana Lea. Occurring with the preceding in Bear Lake and intergrading with it, this form is also abundant in Bluff Lake Creek and the swamp at its head. The specimens from these localities are very distinct and uniform, and several hundred examples showed no tendency to grade into typical palustris. All the specimens found here are very much larger and less fragile than those from Bear Lake. Physa cooperi Tryon. Common in Bear Lake, and a smaller form was found in myriads in a watering trough on the City Creek Canon Road. (Alt. about 2000 ft.) Physa sp. May be a variety of the preceding with which it occurs in Bear Lake, but it has a much more ventricose body-whorl. Physa politissima Tryon. Bear Lake — common. A fine, large species. Planorbis irivolvis Say. Bear Lake ; Bluff Lake Creek ; swamp at Bluff Lake. Very common, but specimens generally much eroded. Planorbis parvus Say. Swamp at Bluff Lake. Specimens identi- fied by Dr. Pilsbry. Planorbis vermicularis Gould. Not uncommon in Bear Lake. Specimens identified by Dr. Ball. It seems to me that this species is hardly more than a mere form of the preceding, although the specimens from Bear Lake have a more rounded and less flattened body-whorl, and are quite readily separated from those found in the swamp. Vitrina alaskana Ball. Two specimens under sticks in the meadow at Bluff Lake. Zonitoides arborea Say. About a dozen specimens found about an old stump in the border of the woods at Bluff Lake. Euconulus julvus Draparnaud. Bluff Lake ; two specimens under logs at the edge of the meadow. This species has already been re- ported from " San Bernardino County " by Binney. Vertigo occidentalis Sterki. One specimen (the type, No. 1860 of my collection) was found near a spring in the canon side below Bluff Lake Swamp. Diligent search on two occasions produced not another specimen, but this was enough for Dr. Sterki to pronounce as " evidently of an unknown species." It is described in NAUTILUS XXI, p. 90, q. v. Epiphragmophora tudiculata W. G. Binney. At the base of the mountains near Highland (1904); near Mentone (1906); also re- ported from above San Bernardino. 124 THE NAUTILUS. SUBDIVISIONS OF THE TEREBRIDJE. BY WILLIAM H. DALL. Having recently had occasion to review the genera of Terebridse, it seemed that the synoptical table might have some interest for students. Genus TEREBRA BruguiSre, 1789. A. Presutural sulcus present. Sculpture uniform at all ages, persistent, suture appressed. Sub- genus STRIOTEREBRUM. Shell short, small. 1. Sculpture reticulate. Section Strioterebrum s. s. 2. Axial sculpture emphatic, spiral obsolete. Fusoterebra. 3. Axial sculpture obsolete, spiral emphatic. Perirhoe. Shell elongate, whorls mesially constricted. 4. Whorls nodulous at both margins. Triplostephanui. B. Sculpture in youth and age discrepant. Subgenus TEREBRA. 6. Young nodulous, sulcus persistent. Section Myurella. 6. Young nodulous, sulcus present in youth. Terebra s. 8. Young axially ribbed, sulcus persistent. 7. Adult slender, smooth. Subula. 8. Adult small, obsoletely ribbed. Abretia. Sulcus obsolete in the adult. 9. Whorls rapidly enlarging. Oxymeris. C. Sulcus wholly absent. Subgenus ACUMINIA. 10. Adult slender, smooth. Section Acuminia. Genus HASTULA Adams, 1853. Presutural sulcus absent, suture appressed. A. Sculpture uniform, persistent. o. Shells small, slender. Hastula s. s. B. Sculpture discrepant. b. Whorls rapidly enlarging. Impages. Genus DUPLICARIA Ball, 1908. A. Sculpture persistent, suture channeled. a. Shell axially ribbed, eulcate. Duplicaria. THE NAUTILUS. 125 Genus SPINEOTEREBRA Sacco, 1891. A. Sulcus absent, suture appressed. a. Columellar border callous, axis impervious. Spineoterebra. b. Columellar border bare, axis pervious.1 Mazatlania. This table is not intended to exhibit all, or even the more import- ant characters upon which the main subdivisions (which will be treated elsewhere) are based, but is rather a key by which the shells may be conveniently assorted. The sections are typified as follows : Strioterebrum Sacco, 1891. T. basteroti Nyst. A recent example is T. dislocata Say. Fusoterebra Sacco, 1891. Fusus terebrina Bonelli. A recent example is T. benthalis Dall. Perirhoe Dall, 1908 (nov.). T. circumcincta Deshayes. An American example is Acus rushii Dall. Triplostephanus Dall, 1908 (nov.). Terebra triseriata Gray. This is Myurella Hinds, in part. Terebra s. s. Lamarck, 1799. T. subulata (Linnd). Myurella Hinds, s. s. 1844. Terebra myuros Lam. Subula s. s. (Schumacher, 1817) Gray, 1847. T. dimidiata (LinnS). Abretia H. and A. Adams, 1853. T. cerithina Lam. Oxymerit Dall, 1900. Terebra maculata Lam. This is Acus Gray, 1847, not Edwards, 1771. Acuminia Dall, 1908 (nov.). T. lanceata (Linne*). Hastula H. and A. Adams, 1853. T. strigillata Lam. Impages E. A. Smith, 1873. T. ccerulescens Lam. Duplicaria Dall, 1908 (nov). T. duplicate Lam. This is Myurella Troschel, not of Hinds. Mazatlania Dall, 1903. T. aciculata Lam. Spineoterebra Sacco, 1891. T. spinulosa Doderlein. Miocene. Mazatlania is Euryta Adams, 1853, not of Gistel, 1848. 1 1 use the term " pervious " technically, to denote an axis gyrate about an empty space which penetrates the center of the shell internally, in contradis- tinction to " umbilicate " or " perforate," which would imply a space external to the inner wall of the whorls and circumscribed by them. 126 THE NAUTILUS. NEW SPECIES OF ANCYLID.E. BY BRYANT WALKER. NEOPLANORBIS SMITHII n. sp. PI. IX, figs. 1 and 2. Shell minute, planorboid, perforate, slightly convex above and below ; periphery obtusely angulate ; thin, translucent, whitish, shin- ing with a silky luster from the fine, closely set, regular lines of growth. No trace of spiral sculpture. Whorls 2, rapidly enlarging ; apex sunken ; the last half of the first whorl elevated above the out- line of the body whorl ; apical whorl convex, the convexity rapidly diminishing towards the aperture ; suture well impressed, rising somewhat at the aperture ; aperture large, oblique, slightly ex- panded, equally curved above and below ; columellar margin dilated, straight and vertical, callously thickened below, smooth ; umbilicus a mere perforation. Alt. 1, diam. 2 mm. Types (No. 27149, Coll. Walker) from the Coosa river at Hig- gin's Ferry, Chilton Co., Ala. Co-types in the collection of T. H. Aldrich, Geo. H. Clapp, John B. Henderson, Jr., and the Phila- delphia Academy. This little species differs from tantillus and all the other known forms of the genus by the entire absence of spiral sculpture and the elevation of the spire above the level of the body whorl. The animal is black and the shell consequently appears of that color until cleaned. NEOPLANORBIS UMBILICATUS n. sp. PI. IX, figs. 3 and 4. Shell minute, planorboid, umbilicate, convex above and below, but flattened above as it approaches the aperture and obliquely flat- tened below the periphery ; periphery obtusely carinate ; brownish horn-color ; lines of growth fine and regular ; surface sculptured by raised spiral lines, which are heavier below than above the periphery. Whorls 2, rapidly enlarging, apex sunken ; apical whorl very con- vex ; body whorl nearly flat in the sutural region, but curving down rapidly toward the peripheral carination ; suture well impressed and depressed below the periphery at the aperture ; aperture large, wider than high, flattened above and below, the upper and lower margins being nearly parallel, obliquely flattened below the per- iphery ; columellar margin broadly dilated, curved and partially THE NAUTILUS, XXI PLA1 E IX. 6 10 8 13 17 11 15 16 18 14 WALKER- NEW SPECIES OF THE NAUTILUS. 127 covering the umbilicus; columella curved, with a heavy callus and obtuse tubercle in the center ; umbilicus round and deep. The animal is yellowish. Alt. 1, diam. 2 mm. Types (No. 27150 Coll. Walker) from the Coosa River at " The Bar" 2^ miles above Yellowleaf Creek, Chilton Co., Ala. Cotypes in the collection of T. H. Aldrich, Geo. H. Clapp, John B. Hender- son, Jr., and the Philadelphia Academy. This species resembles tantillus in being spirally striate but differs in being umbilicate and in having a tooth on the columella, as well as in the general shape. It does not resemble smithii in any of its special features, and differs from carinatus in being more obtusely carinate and in the wider umbilicus and stronger spiral striation. NEOPLANORBIS CARINATUS n. sp. PI. IX, figs. 17 and 18. Shell minute, planorboid, narrowly umbilicate, nearly flat above, convex below, but obliquely flattened below the peripheral carina, which is strong, but rather blunt ; pale horn-color ; lines of growth fine, closely set and regular, sculptured above by a few fine sub- obsolete spiral lines, stronger towards the periphery ; under surface with numerous fine spiral lines heavier than on the upper. Whorls 2, rapidly enlarging ; apex sunken ; apical whorl somewhat flattened above, convexly rounded at the periphery which, at about the be- ginning of the body whorl, becomes angulate and then carinate ; the body whorl above is slightly convex in the center, but flattened toward the suture, and " pinched out " at the periphery to form the carina ; suture well impressed, descending toward the aperture below the periphery ; aperture large, much wider than high and auricu- lated at the periphery by the carina ; upper and lower margins flat- tened and nearly parallel ; columellar margin dilated, free, slightly curved back over the small, round umbilicus, and obtusely angled where it joins the basal margin ; columella somewhat thickened, with a small obtuse tubercle at about the center. Alt. 1, diam. 2 mm. Types (No. 27151, Coll. Walker) from the Coosa river at Dun- can's Riffle, Coosa Co., Ala. Cotypes in the collections of T. H. Aldrich, Geo. H. Clapp, John B. Henderson, Jr., and the Phila- delphia Academy. In form the species reminds one of a minute Planorbis oper- 128 THE NAUTILUS. cularis Gld., its most prominent characteristic being the nearly plane upper surface with a strong peripheral carina. It resembles umbilicatus in being spirally striate and having a columellar tooth, but differs in the greater development of the carina, narrower umbili- cus and in having the spiral lines much weaker. It differs from tantillus in the greater development of the carina, in the small but round umbilicus, dentate columella and weaker spiral striation. The animal is black. All these species of Neoplanorbis were discovered by Mr. Herbert H. Smith in the fall of 1907. They live on the under sides of stones in the more or less rapid current and in suitable localities are very abundant. Mr. Smith took 50 from one small stone. Neoplanorbis seems very local in its distribution. It may be abundant on one shoal and not found at all on another. And on the same shoal, it is frequently restricted to one side of the river or the other. In his progress down the river in 1907, Mr. Smith did not find Neoplanorbis at all, until he reached Cedar Island, Chilton Co., three miles above the mouth of the Yellowleaf Creek, where a single specimen of umbilicatus was found. At " The Bar " two miles further down umbilicatus was found in some abundance on stones in a strong current, while at the same place carinatus was found in a moderate current. There was no intermingling of the species in these two situations. Umbilicatus was not met with below this point. At Butting Ham Shoals, five miles below, in a moderate current, the catch was almost entirely carinatus, the exception being three specimens of smilhii. At Higgins' Ferry, seven miles further down stream, in a moderate current, with the exception of a single example of carinatus, the several hundred specimens were all smithii. While at Duncan's Riffle seven miles below, the catch contained two specimens of smithii, the balance being carinatus. Duncan's Riffle is twenty-four miles by river above Wetumpka, so that, in view of these facts, it is not surprising that N. tantillus was not met with at all. The following key may be of assistance in differentiating the four species of Neoplanorbis now known : 1. Umbilicate, columella dentate 3. 2. Perforate, columella smooth 4. THE NAUTILUS. 129 3. 4. r Periphery carinate, umbilicus narrow carinatui. (Periphery obtusely angled, umbilicus wider. . . . umbilicatut. ( Spirally striate, periphery carinate tantillus. (_No spiral striae, periphery rounded tmithii. VITEEA LEWISIANA N. SP. BY GEO. H. CLAPP. Shell small, depressed widely, perspectively umbilicate, all whorla showing to the apex, umbilicus contained about five times in the diameter of the shell ; yellowish-white, translucent, the inner whorls Upper figures, Vitrea lewisiana Clapp. Type, 18. Lower figures, " dalliana ' Simpson ' Pils. x8. Miami, Fla. showing through the body of the shell, highly polished ; the delicate growth lines are very regularly spaced and close together, smooth below. Spire much flattened ; sutures well impressed, margined ; whorls 3^, slightly convex, the last wide. Aperture oblong-lunate, depressed above, lower margin parallel with the base, lip simple. Gr. diam. 3^, lesser 2.8, alt. l£ mm. Type from Monte Sano, near Huntsville, Ala., also found at Wetumpka and Gurley, Ala., so probably extends over the whole eastern part of the state. Bare. Collected by Herbert H. Smith. 130 THE NAUTILUS. I name this species in honor of the late Dr. Jas. Lewis, whose work on the southern mollusca is well known. The color, and particularly the very regular, close lines of growth at once distinguish this shell from all other species. It is perhaps nearest to V. dalliana, but differs in color, shape and sculpture. In dalliana there is a very minute spiral sculpture, not mentioned in the original description, and only visible under a magnification of about 60 diameters. NOTES. NOTE ON HELIX HORTENSIS — In my article on the distribution of Helix hortensis (THE NAUTILUS, XX, p. 73, 1906). I over- looked a very interesting article by Robert Bell, Jr., " On the Natural History of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and the distribution of the mollusca of Eastern Canada." (The Canadian Naturalist and Geologist, IV p. 215, 1859). As the note on H. hortensis has an important bearing on its distribution and is probably inaccessible to many, I quote it in full : " It seems scarcely credible that this species has been imported from Europe, considering how widely diffused and vastly numerous it has become along the Lower St. Lawrence. On the mainland it was first observed on Mount Com- inis, about nine miles south of St. Luce and on the coast at Metir, where it was abundant and below which it seems to occupy the place of H. albolabris, but is generally much more numerous. In 1857, I found vast numbers of them on the Brandy Pots and Hare Island in the middle of the St. Lawrence opposite Riviere du Loup. The climate of Gaspe seems to be very favorable to their propagation, as they appear to have spread over the country for a considerable dis- tance in land. The yellow and banded varieties seem to be about equally numerous. Where land has been recently cleared and burnt over, their withered shells may be seen strewed in thousands over the surface of the soil. In the valley of the Marcouin they were observed to extend 121 miles inland, which was farther than at any other place. The height at which the last specimen was found was about 1500 feet above the sea, as indicated by the barometer which we had with us. The young from the size of a grain of duck shot to half that of the adult shell were met with in our journey up this valley in the end of July." With this record as a basis it would be THE NAUTILUS. 131 interesting to know to what extent the species has spread during the past fifty years, or whether with advancing civilization and the clearing and burning of the woods it has diminished. We have no recent records outside of the Gaspe region — C. W. JOHNSON. WE regret to announce the death of Charles Abbott Davis, Curator of the Roger Williams Park Museum, Providence, R. I. He died January 29, at the age of thirty-nine years. NOTE ON TURBONILLA CASTANEA AND ODOSTOMIA MONTEREY- ENSIS. — In the hurry of departure for the Philippine Islands, Dr. Bartsch applied to two new Pyramidellids in our recent paper (No. 1574) in the U. S. Nat. Museum Proceedings, the names Turbonilla (Pyrgiscus) castanea (p. 509) and Odostomia (Amaura) montereyensis D. and B., (p. 531). These names being preoccupied, I propose to substitute T. (P.) castanella and 0. (A.) ccurfteldi — WM. H. DALL. MlLAX GAGATES AND VlTREA CKLLARIA IN COLORADO Four of my students, Messrs. Walter Groom, Floyd House, Merrit Hunt and William Winner, recently examined the greenhouses of Boulder for Mollusca, to be used for class purposes. Quite to my surprise, they obtained five species, two of which had not previously been found in Colorado. V- alliaria was first found in Colorado last year, also in a Boulder greenhouse. The species obtained were : (1) Milax gagates (Drap.). Many, of various ages, all of the variety plumbea, and with the keel rather inconspicuous in life. They probably came from the Pacific coast, and represent the hewstoni form, which I have never been able to separate from gagates. (2) Agriolimax agrestis (L.). Several, from light reddish to almost wholly black. (3) Agriolimax campestris (Binney). One. (4) Vitrea cellaria (Miiller). Many specimens, some of good size. (5) Vitrea alliaria (Miller). Several, with the garlic odor very strong. P. S., Feb. 6. — The examination of the Boulder greenhouses has been continued, and to-day Mr. Ivan Beck brought in a number of Vitrea lucida (Drap.), also new to Colorado. One specimen has a diameter of almost 15 mm. There was also secured an example of Vitrea cellaria, var. margaritacea Schmidt, the white variation. As the introduced species of Vitrea are not very generally known, a brief table mayfcbe of service. 132 THE NAUTILUS. Shell small, about 6 mm. diameter ; shell and animal both quite dark ; in life nearly always with a strong garlic odor. V. alliaria (Miller). Shell much larger when mature, and not smelling of garlic. Shell about 10 mm. diameter, compact, nearly circular in out- line, pale brownish or (var. margaritacea) white; animal pale, darker dorsally. V. cettaria (Miiller). Shell larger when mature, broader, with the last whorl broader and flatter, dark-colored ; animal very dark bluish or bluish slate, the basis of the upper tentacles swollen. V. lucida (Draparnaud). T. D. A. COCKERELL. PUBLICATIONS KECEIVED. BERMUDA IN PERIODICAL LITERATURE, with occasional refer- ences to other works : A Bibliography, by George Watson Cole 1907. Pp. xii+275. " By far the greater part of what has been written concerning Bermuda has appeared in various periodicals and the publications of learned societies. These writings may roughly be divided into historical and descriptive, and those relating to natural history. Of history, properly speaking, little has appeared ; but many descriptive articles have been written by tourists and others who have visited those beautiful islands. Their geographical situa- tion and subtropical fauna and flora early attracted the attention of those interested in scientific phenomena. Soon after beginning this work it became apparent to the compiler that the Bermudas have for the past half-century been a favorite field of the zoologist, botanist and geologist. Bearing this in mind, a special effort has been made to render the record of their labors as complete as possible. In order to do this, references are made to some works which are not periodicals, mostly, however, by authors who have also made contributions to periodical literature concerning the flora and fauna of those islands." The scope of this work is sufficiently indicated in the above quota- tion from the author's preface. Mr. Cole has made the bibliography of Bermuda a labor of love for many years, and the number of titles brought together here will surprise even those who have been inter- ested in things Bermudian. The notes given under all important titles amount to a digest of the papers. Thus in dealing with biolo- gical articles, all species described from Bermuda are cited, and ex- tracts are given to show what of interest any paper contains. To the naturalist interested in Bermuda the work will take its place as an indispensable reference book ; but Mr. Cole's delightful notes give the opus a merit all its own ; it is really a readable bibliography. H. A. P. THE NAUTILUS, XXI. PLATE XI 10 9 8 NEW AMERICAN MOLLUSKS. THE NAUTILUS. Vou XXI. APRIL, 19O8. No. 12. NOTES ON PLATE XI. Several references to the figures grouped on this plate were pub- lished before the plate was made up, and require correction in the text. Figs. 1, 2, 3, Polygyra marteusiuna Pils., Tampico, Mexico. Described in the July number, p. 26. The dimensions are wrongly given in the text. The type measures, alt. 5.5, diain. 11 mm., another specimen, alt. 4.8, diam. 8.8 mm. Fig. 4, Flumiiricola minntissima Pils. Idaho. Description in November number, p. 76. Alt. 1.5 mm. Fig. 5, Vertigo occidentalis Sterki. Bluff Lak^. San Bernardino Co., California. Described on p. 90. In our opinion this form should be ranked as a subspecies under V. modesta nearest to V. modesta castanea St., from which it differs in the shorter, wider, less cylindric shape, and the slightly larger teeth. If this view is correct it will stand, as V. modesta occidentalis, among several other slightly differentiated races of modesta, all variable, and especially developed in the Canadian zone of the Rocky Mountains.1 V- m. occidentalis is illustrated from the unique type, by courtesy of Mr. S. S. Berry. It is No. 1860 of his collection. See also p. 123. Figs. 6-10, Micrarionta desertorum Pils. & Ferr. Described on p. 134. H. A. P. 'See in this connection the figures in Pilsbrj and Vanatta, Partial Revision of the American Pupae, 1900, p. 600, pi. 23. 184 THE NAUTILUS. A NEW MICHARIONTA FROM ARIZONA. BY H. A. PILSBRT AND .1. H. FERRISS. When at the Grand Canyon of the Colorado in the autumn of 1906 the writers met Mr. W. J. Gilchrist, who at that time was about to leave the Canyon for the mining region of the lower Colorado. Be- sides various friendly and helpful services in connection with our work at the Canyon, Mr. Gilchrist volunteered to look out for snails in the region he was about to visit. It was with a great deal of pleasure that one of us received a letter and package of snails, making good his offer of assistance. In that desert country snails are not common, and for a long time none were found. Finally, Mr. Gilchrist writes, " I was build- ing a stone monument on a mining claim just after a heavy rain and found three live snails on a rock. These and four dead ones were all I have been able to find. They came from a small range of mountains 12 miles south from Parker, Yuma Co., Arizona." The snails prove to be of a new species, which may be described as follows. MICRARIONTA DESERTORUM n. sp. Plate xi, figs. 6-10. The shell is small, depressed, openly umbilicate, the width of umbilicus contained nearly 5 times in that of the shell, glossy, opaque, pinkish-white with some oblique streaks of flesh-color, and sometimes a few corneous dots ; the inner 2^ whorls fleshy-corneous. The spire is convex but very low, whorls about 4^, the inner ones rather slowly increasing, the last much wider, about double the width of the preceding. The embryonic shell consists of l£ whorls, the first fourth of a whorl smooth, the rest with close, even sculpture of min- ute papillae, which are lengthened in a direction parallel to the sutures, and form a regular pattern of oblique, forwardly descending and ascending rows. The post-embryonic whorls have fine, irregu- lar, somewhat wavy striae in the direction of growth-lines, and papillae like those of the embryonic whorls but much more sparsely placed, and disappearing near the end of the penultimate whorl. The last whorl has weak growth-lines only. It is rounded periferally and descends slowly to the aperture. The suture is deeply impressed, especially at the last whorl. The aperture is oblique, rounded-oval. THE NAUTILUS. 135 Peristome slightly expanded, with a narrow, rusty edge ; upper and outer margins very slightly expanded ; basal margin more expanded ; columellar margin rather broadly dilated. The ends converge and are joined by a short glossy callus. Alt 7.5, diam. 12.9, aperture alt. 5.8, width 6.7 mm. Alt. 6.8, diam. 11.6 mm. Alt. 6.7, diam. 11.1 mm. The whole upper surface, head and tentacles, are blackish-slate color, finely irregularly granulose. There are no distinct dorsal or genital furrows. The sole is tripartite, the areas separated by indis- tinct longitudinal impressed lines, in drowned alcoholic examples. The middle area is twice as wide as the others, slaty-white ; side areas darker slate color. The mantle is whitish, the venation of the lung outlined delicately with gray. The genital system (pi. XI, fig. 9) resembles that of M, hutsoni. The penis (p.~) is swollen near the base, and has a slender retractor muscle {p. r.), and a moderately long flagellum. The vagina is very short, the spermatheca globular, its duct very long, and in- serted unusually low, much farther down than in M. hutsoni. The dart sack (d. s.) is large, and near its base, on the side facing the vagina, the two mucus glands (m. gl.} are inserted close together (as shown in fig. 10, a diagrammatic view of these organs). The mucus glands descend and their enlarged ends lie near the base of the dart sack. The measurements are : length of penis (to insertion of re- tractor), 3 mm. ; length of epiphallus, 1.8 mm. ; length of flagellum, 4 mm. ; length of vagina, 1.8 mm. The jaw has about 6 unequal ribs, grouped in its median part. This species is doubtless related to both Sonorella baileyi and S. fisheri Bartsch, both of which differ in various details of sculpture. It stands nearest to Micrarionta hutsoni Clapp, having the same type of embryonic sculpture ; but that species has a dark band above the perifery, bordered with white above, and a much larger aperture. Cotypes are in the collections of Ferriss and the Academy of Natural Sciences (No. 94783). The anatomical data obtained from living examples of the species hutsoni and desertorum by the junior author, indicate that we went too far in referring species from the lower Colorado basin to the genus Sonorella. It now seems likely that the species wolcottiana, tndioensis, baileyi, fisheri, lohrii, and perhaps some others, belong to 136 THE NAUTILUS. Micrarionta ; a group which should apparently be given generic rank. Anatomically, Sonorella is not closely related to the Micra- rionta series, which has its center in southern and Lower California, and the adjacent border of Arizona. Data to be presented in our forthcoming report on southwestern snails collected in 1906 and 1907 indicate that Sonorella, while remarkably varied in anatomy specifically, yet shows no forms in any way connecting with the Cali- fornian types of Helices. EXPLANATION OF FIGURES. Plate XI, figs. 6, 7, 8. M. desertorum. Fig. 9, genitalia of the same specimen; d. s., dart sack ; epi.t epi- phallus ; _/?.. flagellum ; m. gl.t mucus glands ; p., penis ; sp. d., lower portion of the duct of the spermatheca. The mucous glands and their ducts are shaded. Fig. 10. Diagram of dart sack and mucous glands viewed from the side towards the vagina, showing the contiguous insertions of the mucous ducts. SOME NEW CALIFOENIAN SHELLS. BT WILLIAM HEALEY DALL. RISSOA (ALVANIA) GRIPPIANA Dall, n. sp. Shell small, brownish, solid, cancellate, with one and a half smooth nuclear and five and a half sculptured whorls, nucleus flattish, blunt, remaining whorls rotund, evenly enlarging ; last whorl with 13-14 axial ribs crossed by somewhat more slender, equal, equidis- tant, spiral threads not tuberculate at the intersections, with three somewhat stouter spirals on the base ; earlier whorls with two and then three spiral threads between the sutures ; suture indistinct, aperture obovate, rounded in front, slightly angular behind, with a much thickened lip which in senile specimens is duplex at the mar- gin. There is a very minute chink but no umbilicus. Length 8, max. diam. 1.5 mm. Type specimens from Todos Santos Bay, Lower California, be- tween tides, Hemphill, U. S. Nat. Mus. 46171 ; others from 12 fathoms sand, off the entrance to San Diego harbor, C. W. Gripp 5 THE NAUTILUS. 137 others at various localities north to San Pedro and Catalina Island, California, mostly bench specimens. The species recalls It. tumida Carpenter, but is much more elevated, though less so than R. tn« curvata Cpr., which is also a thinner shell. All three have very nearly identical sculpture. BELA GRIPPI Dall, n. sp. Shell small, straw-color or pale brown with occasional spiral bands of darker brown, or all brown ; six-wborled, of which the first whorl and a half are white, polished, smooth and turgid, the subsequent portion of the shell having a dull surface ; earlier whorls with the periphery nearer the anterior suture, the whorl behind the periphery somewhat flattened and compressed, crossed by low obscure riblets, about a dozen on the fourth whorl, which become obsolete later ; the whorl in front of the periphery shows no axial sculpture ; the whole whorl is spirally sculptured with narrow sharp incised lines, one dividing the space behind the periphery, and about five in front of the periphery on the penultimate whorl ; on the last whorl between the periphery and the siphonal fasciole there are about twelve of these lines, though they probably vary in number with the indi- vidual, while the incremental lines are moderately conspicuous ; outer lips thin, simple ; pillar lips with a small deposit of white callus ; aperture narrow, lunate ; canal very short, wide, with an in- conspicuous fasciole. Length 9, of spire 5, of aperture 4 ; max. diam. 3.5 mm. Dredged off San Diego Bay, about five miles south of the entrance in fifteen fathoms, by C. W. Gripp, on a bottom of broken shell. This is a very well marked species, hardly to be compared with any other known from the coast. Seven specimens were obtained of which two are in Mr. Gripp's collection. The shell has much the aspect of an Anachis but one specimen retained the dried animal and by carefully soaking it out it proved to be a Pleurotomoid, with a short oval operculum with apical nucleus like that of Beta, though the shell from the absence of the strong axial ribs characteristic of most of the northern Belas has a very different aspect from the familiar forms of that genus. The animal is white, with short acute tentacles and very small black eyes. 138 THE NAUTILUS. NEW SPECIES OF ANCYLID.E. BY BRYANT WALKER. ANCYLUS (FERRISSIA) HENDERSONI n. sp. PI. ix, figs. 8-10. Shell small, thin, delicate, oval, slightly wider anteriorly, right side nearly straight, left side regularly curved ; obtusely elevated ; light horn-colored, apex very obtuse, depressed, not projecting above the normal outline of the shell, and only slightly deflected toward the right ; apical pit in the centre and looking upwards ; apical striae strong and regular, originating from the circumference of the apical pit and projecting down towards the whole upper surface of the shell, becoming lighter and more irregular below, comparatively few reach- ing the edge of the shell ; lines of growth irregular, but rather strong, giving a reticulated appearance to the surface where they cross the radial striae ; anterior slope, especially above, very convex, the high- est point of the shell being in front of the apex ; posterior slope slightly concave, nearly straight ; left lateral slope convex, right slope nearly straight. Length 2.5, width 1.5, alt. .75 mm. Type (No. 25707 Coll. Walker) from Lake Waccamaw, N. C. Cotypes in the collections of Messrs. Jno. B. Henderson, Jr., and G. W. H. Soelner, of Washington, D. C. This small species was found by Messrs. Henderson and Soelner in the pools of the swampy woods around the shore of Lake Waccamaw in the fall of 1906. It is well characterized by its obtusely elevated shape, blunt apex and radiating ribs or striae. In sculpture it resembles A. borealis Mse., but differs from its thin, delicate shell, smaller size and differ- ent proportions, being relatively less elevated and with a longer and more sloping posterior outline. ANCYLUS (FERRISSIA) NOVANGLI^E n. sp. PI. ix, figs. 5, 6 and 7. Shell small, depressed, elongate oval, sides nearly parallel, the left being slightly more curved than the right ; regularly rounded at the extremities; apex prominent, bluntly rounded, situated on the posterior third, very eccentric, turned decidedly to the right, apical striae prominent ; lines of growth fine and regular ; anterior slope long, convex with numerous, fine, radiating ribs, which extend to the periphery ; posterior slope oblique, nearly straight below the THE NAUTILUS. 139 swell of the apex ; left slope very convex, more or less compressed toward the apex ; right slope nearly straight below the protrusion of the apex. Length 3.25, width 1.75, alt. 1 mm. Types (No. 22502 Coll. Walker) from a small pond near Cam- bridge, Mass., collected by Owen Bryant. Cotypes in collections of Mr. Bryant and the Philadelphia Academy. This little species is easily distinguished by its narrow, elongated, depressed form, very eccentric apex and the costulate anterior slope. ANCYLUS (FERRISSIA) HINKI.EYI, n. sp. PI. ix, figs. 11-13. Shell oval, slightly wider anteriorly, sides equally curved, ele- vated, conic ; apex nearly central, being only slightly behind the longitudinal center and very slightly deflected toward the right, acute, erect, with strong radial strias ; light greenish horn color with the apex bright rose color ; anterior slope slightly convex, posterior slope slightly concave, lateral slopes of about the same slight con- vexity ; surface smooth, lines of growth fine, but irregular, no trace of ribs or radial stria?, except at the apex. Length 4.75, width 3.5, alt. 2.25 mm. Type (256G1 Coll. Walker) from the Ohio River at Golconda, 111. Cotypes in the collection of A. A. Hinkley, DuBois, 111. Also from the Ohio at Elizabelhtown, 111. (Coll. Hinkley), and from Kentucky. (Coll. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist.). Four specimens were submitted for examination by Mr. Hinkley from the above localities. In two of the specimens, in which the apices are not at all eroded, the truncation is oblique, the apical pit opening towards the left. The right margin of the truncation is high and smooth, the apical strias beginning just below the smooth border of the truncation. On the left and lower margin of the pit the apical strias radiate from the center. A. liinldeyi by reason of its rosy apex groups, apparently, with A. elatior,jilosus and rhodacme. Unfortunately the shells had been cleaned, so that at present it is impossible to say whether it shares the anatomical peculiarities com- mon to those forms.1 It differs from elatior by its smaller size, acute, erect apex and 1 These species and probably all the pink-tipped Ancyli have a very peculiar lingual dentition, quite different from any of the other Ancyli and form a group of probably generic rank, a full description of which will be published shortly. 140 THE NAUTILUS. concave posterior slope. It stands nearest to A. Jilosus from which it differs by the nearly central, acute apex, proportionately longer and concave posterior and less convex anterior slope and smooth surface. It is so entirely different in shape from rhodacme that there is no danger of confounding them. The two specimens from Kentucky, received by the Am. Mus. of Nat. Hist, from Anthony as A. elatior are apparently identical with this species (see NAUT. XVIII, p. 79). ANCTLUS (L^EVPAPEX) HEMISPH^ERICUS n. sp. PL ix, figs. 14, 15 and 16. Shell obtusely elevated, broadly oval or subcircular, sides almost equally rounded ; apex subcentral, very obtuse and only slightly in- clined toward the right ; smooth, light yellowish horn color ; anterior slope very convex, posterior somewhat less so ; lateral slopes about equally convex, the left being as usual, somewhat the longer ; lines of growth rather prominent and irregular, more or less rippled by subobsolete, irregular radial striae. Length (type) 3.5, width 3, alt. 1.5 mm. Length (cotype) 3.8, width 3.1, alt. 1.8 mm. Length (Decatur) 4.1, width 3.25, alt. 1.8 mm. Types (No. 20785 Coll. Walker) from Georgia. Cotypes in the collections of the Kent Scientific Museum, Grand Rapids, Mich., and the Philadelphia Academy. Also from Decatur, Alabama. The type lot formed part of the DeCamp collection now in the Kent Scientific Museum. Unfortunately no definite locality is given and no further information as to the history of the specimens is attainable. This species is very distinct by its globose, almost hemispherical shape. None of the shells have a perfect apex. The type is not quite full grown, but was selected as being less eroded and showing more exactly the contour of the shell. The other measurements given are from mature shells which show the length and width accurately, but owing to erosion are proportionately less elevated. With the erosion of the apex the anterior and posterior slopes have nearly the same convexity, and the specific name adopted becomes even more appropriate than In the type. The specimens from Decatur, Ala., also collected by De Camp, are slightly larger and heavier than the types, but evidently the same •peoiea. THE NAUTILUS. 141 CLAMS AND THE EARTHQUAKE. BY ROBERT E. C. STEARNS. Under the head of " Abalones and the Earthquake," in the April, 1907, number of THE NAUTILUS, my brief article contained all that I had been able to learn up to the preceding February, of the effect of the earthquake of April 18th, 1906, upon the marine life of the coast The Abalones (Haliotis) in the neighborhood of Morro Rock, about 190 miles south of the entrance to San Francisco Bay, were found in abundance, but all dead, and the earthquake it was pre- sumed did the killing. Recently the Indians and the Spanish popu- lation about Marshall's and Tomales Bay, who for several years have been engaged in supplying the local "clam" Paphia staminea Conr. (= 2apcs staminea auct.), for the San Francisco market, have been, it is so reported, thrown out of employment, the bay having become so shallow as to preclude the use of boats, and clam-diggers state that since the great earthquake no clams have been found there. In many instances these toilers of the clam banks have been reduced to poverty. In and around Tomales Bay which is about fifty miles north of the entrance to the Bay of San Francisco, the quake was far more severe than at the southerly abalone locality mentioned, being in the direct northwesterly line of the main movement. Dr. Gilbert1 remarks u the only notable water waves generated by the shock were in Tomales Bay where a group of waves estimated to be 6 or 8 feet high, came to the northeastern shore. The mud which forms the bed of the bay, was shifted and ridged and more or less horizontal displacement occurred as well as a marked shallowing of the waters." At Bolinas, which is north of the Golden Gate, and about thirty miles south of the Tomales locality, the shore of the lagoon or little inner bay, the home, when I was there in June, 1866, of Tresus nutlalli Conrad (Schizotharus nuttalli of Carpenter), was cracked, and the mud near the head of the lagoon was disturbed as well as the general region thereabout according to Mr. Gilbert. The "little round clam " as the Tomales form is called, is a favorite with many epicures, 1 Bulletin No. 324. The San Francisco Earthquake, etc., etc., of April 18, 1906. Washington, 1907. 142 THE NAUTILUS. but its tough little foot is not conducive to the happiness of persons of feeble digestion. The fine clam Tresus is seldom, if ever, seen on the stalls in the San Francisco markets. It is noble in size and a patrician in quality, and makes a most delicious soup or chowder. Los Angeles, Cat., March 8, 1908. THE MOLLUSCA OF NORTH HAVEN, MAINE. BY HENRY JACKSON, JR. The Fox Islands constitute an archipelago in the mouth of Penob- scot River. The largest of these islands is Vinal Haven, and next in size and position is North Haven. On either side are bays rang- ing from 4 to 8 fathoms in depth, with many varieties of bottom. The land is equally well adapted for shell collecting, except that there are practically no hard-wood trees. It is very peculiar that quite a number of species have one small place in which they are abundant, and they are not to be found elsewhere. The fresh-water shells have a very fair chance ; there is a large pond about one mile long which promises large returns in time. There are also several semi-marshy tracts in which many smaller Limneas are found. Unfortunately I have not been able to dredge beyond 30 fathoms. So it is to be hoped that more species will soon be turned up. My sincere thanks are due to Dr. Charles G. Weld, Prof. Edward S. Morse, Mr. Dwight Blaney and Mr. C. W. Johnson, for identifi- cation of various mollusks and other acts of kindness. POLYPLACOPHORA. Trachydermon ruber, Linn6. Trachydermon albus, Linne. Common. Rather common. PELECYPODA. Nucula proximo, Say. Very Toldia myalis, Coutbouy. Rare. common. Large specimens A few specimen dredged in were found in four fathoms eight fathoms water. mud. . Yoldia lucida, Loven. Two Toldia limatula, Say. Very specimens dredged in twenty common. Beautiful specimens fathoms mud. The eggs were over two inches long were ob- in the shell. tained. THE NAUTILUS. 143 Yoldia ihraciceformis, Storer. Several old broken valves and an occasional young specimen. Anodonta cataracta, Say. Unio complanalus, Say. Pecten magellanicus, Gmelin. Pecten islandicus, Miiller. Rare. Single valves occasionally. Anomia simplex, d'Orbigny. Anomia aculeata, Miiller. Mytilus edulis, Linne". Modiolaria nigra, Gray. Rare. Several broken specimens. Modiolaria discors, Linne. Crenella glandu/a, Totten. Crenella decussata, Montagu. Rare. Same locality as G. glandula. Periploma fragilis, Totten. Thracia conradi, Couthouy. Rare. Thracia myopsis, M oiler. Pandora gouldiana, Dall. Lyonsia hyalinn. Conrad. Com- mon. Sandy mud, ten fathoms. Lyonsia arenosa, Moller. TCx- tremely rare. Same localities as L. hyalina. Cyclas islandica, Lin no*. Asfarte undata, Gould. Astarte sttbaequilatera, Sowerby. Pisidiuin abditum, Hald. Sphcerium partumeium, Say. Venericardia novangl/'ce, Morse. Rare. Venericardia borealis, Conrad. Thyasira gouldii, Philippi. Cardium pinnulatum, Conrad. Carditim ciliatum, Fabricius. Rare. Callocardia morrhuana, Linsley. Rare. Macoma balthica^ Linne. Macom'i calcarea, Gmelin. My a arenaria, Linn. Saxicava arctica, Linn. Lymnsea humilis, Say. Lymnnea, umbilicata, Adams. Lymnaza de.sidiosa, Say. Lymnsea columella, Say. SCAPHOPODA. Dentulium entalis, Linne. Common in deep water, mud. GAST1{(JPODA. Acmsea alveus, Conrad. Very common on Zostera marina. Acmsea testudinalis, Miiller. Ra- rer than alveus. Lepeta cesca, Miiller. Puncturella noachina, Linn. Margarita helicina, Fabr. Margarita groenlandica, Gmelin. Very rare. Nation c/ausa, Broderip & Sow- erby. Rather rare. Lunatla heros, Say. Lunatia heros, var. triseriata, Say. Very common. Found both in deep and shallow water, but never in company with Lunatia heros. Vehttina Isevigata, Linn. 144 THE NAUTILUS. Velutina zonata, Gould. Rarer than V. Ixvigata, Crucibulum striatum, Say. Rare alive. Common dead. Littorina littorea, Linn. Littorina rudis, Donovan. Littorina palliata, Say. Lacuna vincta, Montagu, on Zos- tera marina. Lacuna vincta, var. fusca. On large Laminaria. Cinaulaaculeus, Gould. Common at base offucus. Cingula carinata, Mighels & Adams. Rare. A few speci- mens in sandy mud, ten fathoms. Skenea platiorbis, Fabricius. Amnicola limosa, Say. Trichotropis borealis, Broderip & Sowerby. Purpura lapillus, Linn. Very abundant ; var. imbricata is also common. Buccinum undatum, Linn. Chrysodomus decemcostatus, Say. Rather uncommon. Tritonofusus stimpsoni, Morch. Rare. Tritonofusus pygmxus, Stimpson. Nassa trivittata, Say. Nassa obsoleta, Say. Columbella rosacea, Gould. Rare. Bela incisula, Verrill. Bela nobilis, Moller. One speci- men. Bela harpularia, Couthouy. Bela decussata, Couthouy. Rare, in company with B. incisula. Retusa gouldii, Couthouy. Rare Retusa perfenuts, Might-Is. Cylichna alba, Brown. PULMONIFEBA. Zoogenites harpa, Morse. Very common. Vallonia pulchella, Miiller. Polygyra fraterna, Say. Strobilops labyrinthica, Say. Bifidaria pentodon, Say. Pupilla muscorum, Linn^. Vertigo gouldii, Binney. Cochlicopa lubrica, Miiller. Vitrea indentata, Say. One im- mature specimen. Vitrea. hammonis, Strom. Zonitoides arborea, Say. Pyramidula alternata, Say. Pyramidula cronkhitei anthonyi, Pilsbry. Zonitoides exiguits, Stimpson. Zonitoides minuscula, Binney. Extremely rare. Carychium exiffuum, Say. Helicodiscus pareltelus, Say. Aplexa hypnorum, Linn. Succinea retusa, Lea. Succinea avara, Say. Succinea ovalis var. totteniana, Lea. MBL/WHOI LIBRARY UH i7un p