MOLLUSCA OF SOMERSET. 
Var. roseolabiata, Kobelt. 
“We have met with a rare variety at Wells, which is 
orange, with five pale yellow bands, and has the lip and 
throat peach-coloured ” ; Norman. 
A specimen taken by Miss Hele at Blagdon is figured in 
Plate 1, vol. 1, of J. W. Taylor’s Monograph. 
Bratton St. Maur! 
Bitton, Bath; Miss F. M. Hele. 
Var. bimarginata, Moquin- Tandon. 
One example from Abbot’s Hill, Bratton St. Maur! 
Var. rubella, Moquin- Tandon. 
A common form. 
Bath; Mrs. Oldroyd. 
W eston-super-Mare and Berrow! 
On the sand dunes at Burnham, amongst gorse on hillsides 
at Bratton St. Maur, and in hedges bordering Milton 
Hill, near Bruton ! 
Dulverton ; H. Watson. 
Taunton; W. Gyngell. 
Triscombe Stone and Buncombe; WN. G. Hadden. 
Sub-var. cornea. 
Burnham; Milton Hill, near Bruton ! 
Minehead; “1. #. Adams. 
Var. libellula, Risso. 
A common form. 
Bristol ; Bristol Mus. Coll. 
W eston-super-Mare. 
Burnham sandhills; woods and gorse-clad hillsides at Brat- 
ton St. Maur! 
Milton Clevedon and around Bruton; C. D. Heginbotham. 
Dulverton ; H. Watson. 
Var. fascialba, Picard. 
Shell with pale and opaque peripheral band, usually on a 
darker but more translucent ground tint. Concerning 
this form Mr. Taylor writes in his Monograph (II, 
p. 312): “This variety is one of the most interesting 
and suggestive of the whole range this species offers, 
and has been hitherto named as distributed as var. /ew- 
cozona, but. Picard’s name takes precedence ; it is evi- 
dently an atavic form and must be classified with the 
similar paleogenic forms exhibited by Helix cantiana, H. 
hispida, H. rufescens, and other species. This former 
scheme of colouring may be readily recognised even when 
