38 MOLLUSCA OF SOMERSET. 
Var. lubricoides, Férussac. 
Bath; Clark. 
Var. hyalina, Jeffreys. 
Creech Hill, near Bruton ! 
AZECA TRIDENS, Pulteney (= Cochlicopa tridens, Pulteney). 
Very rare. Jeffreys wrote of it in 1833, “ For my specimens 
I am indebted to the kindness of Mrs. Smith, who collected 
several of them alive about eight or ten years ago on some 
loose fragments of rock in Brockley Coombe, near Bristol.” 
Twenty-seven years later Norman observed that ‘ Brockley 
Coombe is the only Somersetshire locality known for this 
shell. It should be looked for, more especially, on the south 
side among damp moss.” 
Mr. Francis A. Knight, in a recent letter to me, remarked 
that it “probably occurs in Weston Wood, as two specimens 
were found among a number of lubrica from that locality.” 
Var. crystallina, Dupuy. 
Brockley Coombe ; Jeffreys. 
C@cCILIOIDES ACICULA, Miller (= Achatina acicula Muller.) 
Locally abundant. Many specimens have been obtained 
from river drift in the northern part of the county. It is a 
strictly subterranean species, and is seldom found alive. 
North. 
Yatton ; Cundall. 
Leigh Woods ; W. W. Stoddart. 
Leigh Down; Miller. 
“ Roots of grass, Clevedon Hill; Mendips, near Wells ; 
and among rejectamenta of the river Avon”; Norman. 
Rejectamenta of the Cale above Wincanton; of a rivulet 
at Bratton St. Maur; and of the Brue below Castle 
Cary :—in large numbers! Shepton Montague and 
Wincanton ! 
Weston and Winscombe, and in great numbers in the 
Brue drift ; #. A. Knight. 
Jenyns Collection, Bath Museum. 
Abundant in the shaft of many of the human bones found 
in Wick Barrow, Stogursey ; H. St. George Gray. 
South. 
Taunton; W. R. Crotch. 
Hatch Beauchamp, Taunton, one specimen only ; Wake- 
Bowell. 
Yeovil; J. Ponsonby. 
Luccombe ! 
