HELICID®. 29 
Mon. sinistrorsum. 
Clevedon ; Norman. 
Bristol and Bath; Miss F. M. Hele. 
Miss Hele found three specimens on separate occasions in 
Paddy’s Lane, Bristol. 
Mon. scalariforme. 
“YT have found near Bristol two shells approaching the 
ram’s horn variety shewn at the British Museum; Mess 
F. M. Hele. 
This form is exceedingly rare, it is the mon. cornucopia, 
Gmelin, of our text books. Mrs. Oldroyd took a speci- 
men at Bath. 
“A very fine example found at Taunton is almost like 
mon. cornucopia; W. Gyngell. 
Two typical scalarid specimens (see Plate IV, 2, 3) were 
obtained by Mr. William Macmillan from a “ wall-fish ” 
collector near Cole Station. He generously presented 
them to the Haslemere Museum: also the subscalarid 
example mentioned below. These occupy an inter- 
mediate position between the extreme scalarity of 
cornucopia and the form at one time known as mon. 
subscalariforme, Williams. Of the latter we have the 
following Somerset record: “ Examples upon the cliffs 
towards Ladies’ Bay, Clevedon, have the spire pro- 
duced so that the shell assumes the form of Paludina 
viviparus ;” Norman. <A single specimen was found by 
Mr. William Macmillan in the “creel” of a wall-fish 
collector near Castle Cary. 
HELIX NEMORALIS, Linné. 
Generally distributed. Remarkably abundant, and showing 
great diversity in size, coloration, and banding, on the sand- 
hills by the coast about Burnham, where I have found some 
very large forms, also dwarfed ones. Large forms (var. Major, 
Férussac) have also been recorded from Cheddar Cliffs (J. 
Madison) and Weston-super-Mare! Mr. H. St. George Gray 
found it commonly iu the excavation of Wick Barrow, Stogur- 
sey, in 1907. 
Var. conica, Pascal. 
A fine example from Abbot’s Hill, Bratton St. Maur! 
Near Locking ; J. Madison. 
Var. compressa, Terver. 
Hedge at the bottom of Bratton Hill, Bratton St. Maur! 
