44 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY— I3TH ANNUAL REPORT 



Textularia paiiauiensis Cushman. 



Textularia panamcnsis Cushman, Bulletin 103, U. S. Nat. Mus., 1918, p. 

 53, pi. 20, fig. I. 



A single, rather typical specimen of this species was obtained 

 from the well at Fort Myers, at a depth of 600 feet. 



The type of this species is from the Miocene of the Gatiin for- 

 mation of the Panama Canal Zone. 



Tc.vtiihtria sp. 



An elongate species, generally quadrangular in transverse sec- 

 tion, gradually tapering toward the initial end, was found in com- 

 pany with Orbitolina in several of the wells. 



They are as follows: City Well at Apopka, 250 feet; Ponce 



de Leon Well, St. Augustine, 440 feet ; and Well No. 3, Palmetto 



Phosphate Company, 2 3-4 miles northeast of Tiger Bay, 720 



feet. 



Genus Verneuilina d'Orbigny, 1840. 



Verneuilina spinulosa Reuss. 



Verneuilina spinulosa Reuss, Denkschr. Akad. Wiss. Wien, vol. i, 1850, 

 p. 374, pi. 47, fig. 12. H. B. Brady, Rep. Voy. Challenger, Zoology, vol, 9, 

 1884, p. 384, pi. 47, figs. 1-3. Cushman, Publ. 29:, Carnegie Institution of 

 Washington, 1919, p. 34. 



The only one of the wells at which this species occurred is that 

 at Marathon, on Key Vaca, where it is found at a depth of 180 

 feet. 



I have recorded it from the MSocene Marl of the Yumuri River. 

 Matanzas, Cuba. 



Genus Valvulina d'Orbigny, 1826. 

 Valvulina sp. ' 

 Plate I, figure 5. • 



A single specimen from the well of the Bonheur Development 

 Company at Burns, Wakulla County, at a depth of 325 feet, seems 

 referable to this genus. 



Chrysalidina ? sp. 

 Plate I, figures 6 a, b. 



At 1,262 feet in the well at Marathon, Florida, there is a 

 species, tapering in form, with rounded chambers, and in addition 



