518 | Mr. Jerrreys’s Supplement to the ** Synopsis of 
that it is not a Carychium, the animal having four tentacula, the 
two upper ones ocellated at their extremity. Indeed the ap- 
pearance of the animal and its shell (the latter being slightly 
channelled at its base when young) bears so close a resemblance 
to the Cionella lubrica of my Synopsis, that I have no hesitation 
in assigning it a place near that species. As the character 
indicated by the word politus is common to all the hitherto 
known species of Cionella, I cannot do better than adopt for 
this the name of Goodalli, which Baron Férussac has proposed 
in honour of my kind and much respected friend the Provost 
of Eton. 
Pfeiffer is, I believe, the first author who has noticed it out 
of this country. 
AURICULA. 
A. alba, p. 369. 
Animal album. — Sustentaculum latius, hyalinum. 
Alive in crevices of the rocks at Ilfracombe and Linton, North 
Devon. 
4 bis. A. multivolvis. Jeffreys. 
Animal 
Testa ovato-fusiformis, ventricosa, solidior, glabra, nitida, 
castaneo-albescens. Anfractus 12 connexi, superne 
parüm crenati: spirà obtusé acuminatá. Apertura 
oblonga, angusta; plicá unicá ad inferiorem partem 
columellz discernendá : peristomio simplice. 
Long. 0.3.— Diam. 0.15. 
Voluta bullaoides. Montagu, Suppl. p. 102. t. 30. f. 4. 
Tornatella bullaoides. Fér. 108. 
Baron de Férussac favoured me with the specimen above de- 
scribed, which he had received with two others from Mr. Bean 
of Scarborough, as found on that coast. It has the habit and 
aperture 
