GLANDINA. 139 



A. rosea Desh. is the same as Glanclina truncata. 



A. striata DeK. &c. is the same as Gl. truncata ? He refers to 

 Fer. pi. 136, figs. 8-10, whicli is A. rosea, and not an inhabitant 

 of Florida, from whence DeKay quotes his species. 



A. subula Pf. is the same as BuHmus subula. 



A. Texasiana Pf. is the same as Glandina Texasiana. 



A. truncata Pf. &c. is the same as Glandina truncata. 



A. Vanuxemensis Pf. &c., is the same as Glandina Vanuxemensis. 



Genus GLANDINA Schumacher. 



GLANDINA BULLATA Gould vol. ii. p. 298, pi. Ixii. a. 



Achatina bullala Pfeiffer, Mon. Hel. Viv. iii. 512. 



Okacina hullata Ghay aud Pfeiffek, Brit. Mas. Cat. Pulm. 24. 



GLANDINA CORNEOLA. 



Plate LXI. Figure 1. 



Testa conico-oblonga, tenuis, nitens, cornea; anfr. 7 ad 8, eouvexi, 

 tenuissime et longitudlnaliter striati, et lineis minutis creberrimis volven- 

 tibus notati ; sutura crenulata ; apertura oblonga, partem testae dimidiam 

 ^quans ; columella contorta, truncata, callo induta. 



SYNONYMS AND REFERENCES. 



Glandina truncata var. Binney, vol. ii. p. 302. 



Glandina corueola W. G. Binney, Proc. Phila. Acad. 1857, p. 189; Notes, p. 9. 



DESCRIPTION. 



Animal not observed. 



Shell oblong-conic, thin, shining, horn-color ; whorls 7 

 to 8, longitudinally striate, and covered with numerous 

 minute revolving lines ; suture slightly crenulated ; aper- 

 ture oblong, half as long as the shell; columella curved^ 

 truncated, covered with light callus. 



Length, 50 ; diameter, 18 millimetres. 



Geographical Distribution. Western Texas (Redfield), 

 Mexico (Smithsonian Collection). 



Remarks. This shell, very rare in collections, is distin- 

 guished by its light horn-color, thin shell, and revolving 



