256 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [1899. 



conical form, and the simple curvature of the outer lip.' The 

 specimen figured, from Lower California, seems to fulfil the require- 

 ments of Carpenter's too brief description. 

 Eulima randolphi n. sp. PI. XI, figs. 13, 14. 



Shell smooth, rather slender, shining, bluish white when empty, 

 but when the animal is dried in, the spire is orange colored above, 

 pink in the middle with sometimes a slight yellowish band on the 

 body whorl ; opaque ; outlines of the spire straight, conical. Apex 

 blunt, rounded, of moderate size, suture impressed; no varices. 

 Seven or eight whorls, the body whorl ovate, whorls of the spire 

 a little convex. Aperture ovate, outer lip sloping to the right, 

 nearly straight, in profile it is moderately arched forward below and 

 sometimes retracted very slightly above. Columella slender, con- 

 cave below, convex above, forming an angle with the convex 

 parietal wall, parietal callus very thin. 



Alt. 6, diam. 2.3, length of aperture 2.1, breadth 1,1, diam. of 

 apex .3 mm. 



Unalaska, Alaska, under stones, P. B. Randolph. 



The type is in the collection of the Academy of Xatural 

 Sciences, No. 73,729. 



This is the species mentioned by Mr. Randolph in the Nautilus 

 for February, 1899, p. 112, as being very plentiful under stones. 

 It is a rather slender species distinguished from E. micans Cpr. by 

 its smaller size, more impressed sutures, straighter profile of the 

 outer lip and the blunter apex. It is distinguished from E. rutila 

 by its blunter apex, fewer whorls, stouter form, in being o])aque 

 and having the sutures more impressed. It also lacks any trace of 

 varices. 

 Eulima micans " Cpr." Reeve. PI. XI, figs, i, 2. 



U. micans Cpr., Reeve, Concb. Icon., Vol. xv; Eulima, pi. iv, sp. 33 (Dec, 

 1865). 



This is the largest California species of Eulima. It is gener- 

 ally of a bluish white color below and lead colored above. The 

 apex is often orange tinted, is quite sharp and seldom decollated. 



- Carpenter has de-cribed ''Ealitna (? var.) com pacta from San Pedro a3 

 similar to young E. micanis but mucb less terete, margins of the spire little 

 excurved, apex lost, seven whorls remaining, base and aperture elongated, 

 the lip little sinuated. It measures .25 X .09 inch [= 6.25 X 2.25 mm.], 

 with the spire .15 long [= 3.75 mm.]. The divergence 22°." Proc. Cat. 

 Acad. Nat. Sci., Vol. iii, 1866. 



