52 CONUS. 
C. MULTILINEATUS, Sowb. PI. 15, fig. 94. 
Shell turbinated, wide-shouldered; veddish chestnut, light- 
banded in the middle, with numerous lines of close-set chestnut 
dots; spire concavely elevated, tuberculate. Length, 40 mill. 
Habitat unknown. 
Closely allied to C. lignarius, but differs in its wider form, and 
tuberculated spire. Described from a single specimen. 
C. Kopeitit, Lobbecke. Pl. 15, fig. 95. 
Shell smooth, spire and base striate; yellowish brown, with a 
lighter median band. Length, 42 mill. 
Habitat unknown. 
Perhaps only a variety of C. lignarius. 
F Seetion XJ. Maat. 
Pionoconus and Phasmoconus, Morch. 
C. consors, Sowb. PI. 15, figs. 96-100. 
Spire depressed conical, with shallow channel, and revolving 
strie, sometimes tessellated with chestnut; body-whorl rather 
narrow, somewhat convex, grooved towards the base, somewhat 
_round-shouldered, rather thin; white, yellowish and orange- 
brown, variously clouded and indistinctly banded; aperture 
white. Length, 2-3 inches. ss 
Moiuceas, Philippines, New Caledonia. 
C. carinatus, Swainson (fig. 97), is placed here by Dr. Wein- 
kauff, and I agree with him, although Mr. E. A. Smith (Jour. 
Linn. Soc., xii, 535) makes it a synonym of C. magus. C. 
anceps (fig. 98), and C. innexus, A. Ad., as well as C. Daullei, 
Crosse (fig. 99), are synonyms. C. ustulatus, Reeve (fig. 100), 
is considered by Mr. E. A. Smith a synonym of C. magus, but 
J think it more closely allied to C. consors. 
C. Futvocinctus, Crosse. Pl. 15, fig. 1. 
Shell with slight revolving grooves, obsolete above ; yellowish 
white, with a broad superior band of orange-brown; epidermis 
thin. Length, 3 inches, 
W. Coast of Africa. 
C. consANGUINEUS, H. A. Smith. PI. 15, fig. 2. 
Shell smooth, spire and base grooved; yellowish white, banded 
