MOLLUSCA OF SOMERSET. 
Var. albo-fasciata, Jeffreys. 
Near Bristol; Bristol Mus. Coll. 
Fairly common about Jack White's Gibbet, Bratton St. 
Maur ! 
Sub-var. puncticulata. 
With an indistinct and narrow yellow peripheral band 
(Plate rv, 5). 
Bratton St. Maur! 
Var. zonata, Moquin- Tandon. 
Cheddar; Miss F. M. Hele. 
Bratton St. Maur ! 
Berrow ! ; 
Var. unicolor, Moquin- Tandon. 
“ An unicolorous specimen (not exalbida, Menke) from Hatch 
Beauchamp, near Taunton; Rev. LE. W. Wake-Bovwell. 
Bath ; Miss Fairbrass. 
Freshford, rare; Miss F. M. Hele. 
Sub-var. grisea. 
Leigh Woods; Miss F. M. Hele. 
Coombe Down, Bath; Mrs. Oldroyd. 
Near Porlock ; 1. EF. Adams. 
Yeovil; W. Gyngell. 
Var. evalbida, Menke (Plate 1V, 4). 
Locally abundant. Miss F. M. Hele informed Mr. Taylor 
that she had “easily bred H. aspersa, but variety e2- 
albida degenerates into a shell covered with a dirty 
browny-yellow epidermis, instead of the exquisitely 
delicate lemon hue found on them in their wild state ; 
I have thought that feeding them on lettuce may pro- 
duce this change of colouring, as the more lettuce I 
gave mine, the darker and dingier the epidermis be- 
came” (Journ. Conch., 1V, 100). Taylor remarks that 
“in the neighbourhood of nettles and ivy at Leigh 
Woods, Clifton, where it was discovered by Miss Hele, 
as many as twenty have been taken in a single evening, 
but the chief locality is now destroyed, being covered 
by a flourishing street of shops” (Journ. Conch., 1883). 
Common, Leigh Woods, 1878; Miss F. M. Hele. 
Cuckoo Hill, near Bruton, very local but abundant ; C. D. 
Heginbotham. 
The cross roads at Bratton St. Maur, known as “Jack 
White’s Gibbet”! At this spot I once secured between 
50 and 60 fine specimens in one evening. 
Cannington, near Bridgwater. 
