430 Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



41 lo. "■ Farfiila fusca Pse. (typical), Raiatea, Coll. Pse., and Car- 

 rett." Thirteen specimens, varying in color from dark castaneous to 

 cinereous-brownish, pale olivaceous brown and whitish. Most of them 

 have a parietal tooth. See notes under Nos. 4128 and 4129. 



41 1 1. '^ Farti/Ia protca Pse. (typical), Raiatea, Coll. Pse., Coll. 

 Garr. ' ' Twelve specimens, brown or dark castaneous, generally with 

 an obscure paler band. In color and appearance they closely resemble 

 P. ovalis Pse., Nos. 4126 and 4127. See note under 41 28. In all 

 Dr. Hartman's catalogues Z'. //W^(? is treated as a variety oi fusca. 

 The specific identity was well recognized by Mr. Garrett as early as 

 May 8, 1879. He wrote : '■'■ P. protca = fusca and is a strictly ground 

 species. " 



41 12. '■^ Partitla protca Pse., Raiatea." Seven specimens, brown 

 or pale, without bands, and more or less ol)viously strigate. 



41 13. '^ Parttila protca Pse. MS. (white var.), Raiatea," Coll. 

 Garr." Five specimens, pale with ob.scure oblique brownish striga- 

 tions. One has a well -developed parietal tooth. 



41 14. '■'■ Parti/ /a protca V'st. MS., Raiatea, Garrett datum." One 

 .specimen. The shell is shorter than usual, with the last whorl slightly 

 angulated ; the surface is marked with fine broken spiral lines of a 

 whitish color, apparently produced by some incrusting substance in the 

 spiral sculpture. Possibly this is the shell which Dr. Hartman sent to 

 Mr. Garrett for comparison, with the label P. /ug7//>r/s, and which 

 Garrett returned, January 25, 1885, with the following note: "Your 

 P. lugubris is certainly not Pease's species described by him in the P. 

 Z. S. 1864. Neither did I find anything like it in the valleys inhabited 

 by lugubris. It is a form of fusca, and was collected in the Vaioare 

 Valley. ' ' 



4115. '■' Partula protca Pse. (abnormal), Raiatea." Three speci- 

 mens of the banded variety, all with the spire much depressed; two 

 show the parietal tooth. 



41 16. '■'■ Partnla protca Pse. MS. From the British Museum. 

 Marked P. uavigatoria Pfr. , Coll. Pse." On the back of the card is 

 written: "Sent by the British Museum." Five specimens, one dark 

 castaneous, obsoletely banded, three castaneous, banded, and one pale. 

 Carpenter referred P. protca to P. navigatoria Pfr. 



4117. " Partula citrina P.se. (typical), Raiatea." Eight speci- 

 mens. In his earlier catalogues Dr. Hartman placed this among the 

 synonyms oi P. faba. In Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Phila. , 1885, p. 207, 



