i TURBO. 819 



i 



Le Limagon a grains de petite Verole. Favanne, ii. p. 140. 



t.9. f.I. 

 Lister Conch. t.30. f.28. Petiver Gaz. t.70. f. 11. Gual- 



ter, t. 45. f. E. Jrgenville, t. 6. f. M. Seha, iii. t. 39. 



f. 28 and 29- 

 Inhabits Southern Europe. Linnceus. Jamaica. Lister. Coasts 

 of Goree. Adanson. Normandy, Brittany, England, Spain, 

 the Antilles, Provence, &.c. Favanne. 

 Shell about an inch long, and nearly two-thirds as broad, of a 

 pale lead-colour, with whitish beads in crowded transverse 

 rows ; it has seven whirls, which are much contracted at the 

 sutures, and the throat is brown. 



-ETHiops. 9. Shell obtuse, transversely grooved, 

 and alternately crenulated with black and 

 white ; aperture effuse, white, and the pillar- 

 lip bordered with brown. 



Turbo ^thiops. Gmelin, p. 3596. 



Turbo, No. 43. Schroeter Einl. ii. p. 78. 



iEthiopissa, cum dentibus suis candidissimis. Chemnitz, y. 



p. 215. t. 182. f. 1820 and 1821. 

 Born Mas. Vign. at p. 340. f. b. 



Inhabits the coasts of New Zealand. Chemnitz. 



This shell appears, by Chemnitz's figures, to be about an inch 

 long, and ten lines broad, black, with transverse ribs, which 

 are divided by white longitudinal narrow stripes ; the sum- 

 mit is obtuse and white, with the appearance of having been 

 worn. Born, without any description, has figured this shell 

 as a specimen of a Turbo of the present division. 



PUNCTATus. 10. Shell ovate, thick, with six de- 

 pressed whirls, of which the two lower are 

 very large, and the spire mucronated ; inside 

 brown. 



Turbo punctatus. Gmelin, p. 3597. 



Turbo, No. 120. Schroeter Einl. ii. p. 104. 



Le Marnat. Adanson Senegal, p. l68. t, 12. f. 1. 



La Guignette Africaine. Favanne, ii. p. 146. t. 71. f. A I, 

 and A 2. 

 Inhabits the coasts of Goree. Adanson. 

 Shell seven or eight lines long and about five broad, very 



thick, smooth, shining, and composed of six slightly ventri- 



cose whirls, which are shghtly marked by the suture ; the 



outer surface is of a greyish lead-colour, or sometimes red- 



