434 



HELICID^. 



Fig. 692. 



cone ; whorls five, rather convex, the last scarcely equalling two 

 fifths the shell's length, ascending above, somewhat nar- 

 rowed towards the base ; columella deeply sub-plicate, 

 parietal wall of the aperture furnished with one tooth- 

 like callus ; aperture vertical, sub-semi-circular ; peris- 

 tome thin, scarcely expanded, its right termination quite 

 arched. Length two and three fourths, diameter one 

 millimetres. 



Inhabits Greenland, and has also been found at Anti- 

 costi Island. 

 The description given aliove is translated from Pfeiffer. The 



specimen figured, which I refer to this species, has another denticle 



on the columella, and a lamina-like process within the aperture at 



the base of the last whorl. 



p. Hoppii. 



Pupa pentodon. 



Fig. 120. 



Shell elongated-ovate, obtuse at apex, smooth ; whorls five ; aperture sub-tri- 

 angular, armed with nine teeth, the two largest of which are curved; lip white, 

 broadly everted ; umbilicated. 



Vertigo pentodon, Say, Jouni. Acad. Nat. Sc. ii. 376 (1822) ; ed. Binnet, 27. 



Pupa pentodon, Gould, Best. Journ. Nat. Hist. iv. 353, pi. 16, figs. 10, 11 (1843). — De 



Kay, N. Y. Moll. 50, pi. 4, fig. 48 ; pi. 35, fig. 337 (1843). — Pfeiffer, Mon. Hel. 



Viv. ii. 359; in Chemn. ed. 2, 125, pi. 16, figs. 24-26. — Binney, Terr. Moll. ii. 



328, pi. 12, fig. 1. — W. G. Binnky, Terr. Moll. iv. 143. 

 Pupa cunndens, Goold, Inv. 189, fig. 120 (1841). 

 Pupa Tappaniana, Adams, Sillim. Journ. [1] xl. Siippl. ; Vermont Shells, 158 (1842). — 



Pfeiffer, Symbola;, ii. 55. 

 Leucochila pentodon, Morse, Journ. Portl. Soc. i. 36, fig. 85 ; pi. 10, fig. 86 (1864) ; Am. 



Nat. i. 667, fig. 56 (1868). 



Shell minute, ovate, but much elongated ; of a spermaceti-white 

 color ; whorls five, convex, smooth, gradually diminishing to an 

 obtuse apex ; suture deeply impressed ; aperture sub-tri- 

 angular, with the front and outer angles rounded, and 

 the outer lip curved inwards, so as almost to make the 

 aperture heart-shaped ; the transverse margin is straight, 

 and slightly oblique ; the inner lip is also nearly straight, 

 so that these two form a right angle at their junction ; lip 

 widely reflected, flattened, white ; throat armed witli nine 

 teeth ; the longest, somewhat curving to tlie left, com- 

 pressed and pointed, is situated on the middle of the transverse lip, 

 and has a small one seated at its left side ; at the front, nearly op- 



Fig. 693. 



P. pentodon. 



