326 TERRESTRIAL AIR-BREATHING MOLLUSKS. 



Mountains in Cherokee County, North Carolina : a species of the Cumber- 

 land Subregion ; also in Rutherford County, North Carolina. 

 Jaw as usual in the genus : 1 ribs. 

 Lingual membrane (PI. XVI. Fig. E) with 40—1—40 teeth. 



Mesodon exoleta, Binney. 

 Vol. HI. PI. X. 



Shell imperforate, convex, somewhat ventricose ; epidermis of a uniform yel- 

 lowish-horn,' or russet-color; whorls between 5 and 6, with fine, parallel stria? 

 crossing them obliquely; body- whorl large and ventricose; suture well marked 

 and distinct; aperture rounded, contracted by the peristome, the plane of the 

 aperture making a considerable angle with the plane of the base; peristome 

 thickened, white, reflected, its basal portion subdentate; parietal ivall with a 

 prominent, white, oblique tooth; umbilicus covered Greater diameter 28, 

 lesser 23 mill. ; height, 1 7 mill. 



Eel r ...,:/, Binney, Terr. Moil., II. 131, PL X. — Leidy, j\ M U.S., 256 

 PL X Figs. I 3, anat. — DeKay, N. . . M L, 27, I. II. Fig. - - kV. < 

 Binney, i IV. 54 ; L. & Fr.-"V7. Sh., I. U4 (1869). 



Helix zal. Iff, Binney, B irn. • I ,. . . 



Fig. Moll. An... PL CXCI, Fig. 9, from i , cram., no descr. — Pfeiffer, 

 Moil He). Viv., I. 316. — Deshayes in Fer. , I. 139. — Eeeye, CY,,. toon., 

 No. ' 



Helix alb. ' ' ar., Ferussac, PL XT.VI. a, Fig. 6. — Pfeiffer, Syrnb., II, 

 22 (no descr.) ; in Chemnitz, ed. 2. I. 81, PL X. Figs. 19, 20. 



Mesod Tryon, Am. Journ. Conch., III. 39 (1867). 



A Post-pleiocene species, now found in the Interior Region. From Western 

 New York and Pennsylvania to Missouri ; from Georgia and Alabama to 

 Illinois. 



Animal orayish-brown or blackish above, paler on the posterior extremity 

 and base; eye-peduncles black, long, and slender; glands very prominent; 

 length, when fully extended, including the eye-peduncles, equal to thrice the 

 breadth of the shell. (See Bost. Journ. Nat. Hist., I. PL IX.) 



Though resembling M. albolabris in many respects, it differs in general 

 aspects, and in many very observable particulars. It is smaller, more convex, 

 and the body-whorl is more ventricose than in that species. The peristome is 

 less flat and broad, and is sometimes a little grooved. The aperture is more 

 round, and the plane of the mouth, instead of being flattened in the direction 

 of the plane of the base, is much more upright, making a considerable angle 

 with thi . J the shell. Attention to these differences will enable one to 



distinguish the shell, even before the tooth is added. In those individuals 

 where the tooth is wanting, there : - a slight deposition of testaceous 

 matter m its place, not distinguishabl vithoul dose observation. In its geni- 

 talia it has decided specific distim tion (see p. 319). 



