110 TERRESTRIAL AIR-BREATHING MOLLUSKS. 



the umbilical region ; suture lightly impressed ; aperture scarcely oblique, do- 

 pressed, transverse, lunate; peristome simple, acute, sinuate, the columellar 

 margin very rapidly and narrowly reflected over, and almost en- 

 tirely covering the very small perforation. Greater diameter 

 12i, lesser 11 mill. ; height, 5 mill. 



Zonites Helix sculptilis, BLAND, Ann. N. Y. Lye., VI. 279, PI. IX. Figs, 



enlarged! 11 ~ 13 (^S). W. G. BiNNEY, Terr. Moll., IV. 110, PL 



LXXVII. Fig. 15. PFEIFFER, Mai. Bliitt. 1859, 5. 



Hijnlina sculptMis, TRYON, Am. Journ. Conch., II. 249 (1866). W. G. BINNEY, 

 L. & Fr.-W. Sh., I. 290 (1869). 



Anantehely Mountains, North Carolina, Eastern Tennessee, Bridgeport, Ala. 

 It may be considered a species of the Cumberland Subregion. 



In sculpture it is closely allied to Z. indentatus, of which it might almost be 

 termed a gigantic variety, but the impressed striae are more numerous, and 

 closer together. The form of the aperture is very near that of Z. inornatus. 



The general aspect of this shell reminds one of the Asiatic group, to which 

 Helix resplendens, Phil, and H. vitrinoides, Desh. belong. 



Animal long, slender, dirty-white, bluish on head and eye-peduncles : a dis- 

 tinct locomotive disk, and furrows alongside of foot, meeting over a mucus 

 pore ; tail often recurved at tip, and bearing generally a drop of mucus on it ; 

 eye-peduncles long, slender. 



Jaw as usual in the genus. 



Z. sculptilis (PI. II. Fig. P) has 40 1 40 teeth on its lingual membrane, 

 with 4 perfect laterals. 



Genitalia unobserved. 



Zonites Elliotti, KEDFIELD. 



Shell with rather a narrow umbilicus, depressed-orbiculate, with fine trans- 

 verse stria?, greenish horn-colored, hardly translucent, shining beneath ; spire 

 convex but not much raised ; whorls 5, rather convex, last one 

 sometimes very slightly depressed at the aperture ; suture deeply 



impressed ; aperture very oblique, lunate-circular ; peristome a lit- 

 tle sinuate, acute, but thickened_within. Greater diameter 9, lesser 

 8 mill. ; height, 4 mill. 



Helix Elliotti, REDFIELD, Ann. N. Y. Lye., VI. 170, PI. IX. Figs. 



8-10 (1856). GOULD, Terr. Moll., III. 23. W. G. BINNEY, 



Terr. Moll., IV. 116, PL LXXVII. Fig. 18. 



Macrocydis Elliotti, TRYON, Am. Journ. Conch., II. 240, PL III. Fig. 10 (1866). 

 Zonites. Elliotti, W. G. BINNEY, L. & Fr.-W. Sh., I. 291, Fig. 523 (1869). 



Mountains of Georgia and North Carolina, and Wayne County, West Vir- 

 ginia. It is a species of the Cumberland Subregion. 



Animal with a distinct caudal mucus pore, locomotive disk, and longitudinal 

 furrows above the margin of the foot. It is therefore a true Zonites. 



