328 THE CHICAGO ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. 
SHELL: Attenuated, more or less scalar, periostracum light yel- 
lowish horn; sculpture as in palustris; whorls 6 to 7, loosely coiled, 
generally quite convex; spire long, attenuated, pointed, somewhat 
scalar; sutures typically very deeply impressed; aperture elongate- 
ovate or lunate, about one-third the length of the shell; peristome thin, 
bordered by a heavy varix which is edged with dark red or chestnut; 
inner lip thin, narrow, reflected over and nearly closing the umbilicus, 
leaving a very small chink; columella with a distinct, ascending plait; 
axis strongly twisted. The surface is sometimes malleated. 
Length. Width. Aperture length. Width. 
24.00 8.00 9.50 5.25 mill. Joliet, Ill. Type 
23.00 [cit tr3) 9.00 5:00 as 7 7 
22.00 7.00 8.75 ANT De =: . * 
Tyres: Chicago Academy of Sciences, four specimens, No. 23606; 
cotypes, Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, No. 81557. 
Type Locariry: Rock Run, Joliet, Hlinois. 
ANIMAL: Not differing from typical palustris. 
Jaw: As in palustris. 
Raputa (Pl. VIII, fig. G): Formula #%+%4§41134214 22, 
(32-1-32) ; the teeth do not differ materially from those of palustris; 
the transition teeth begin at the ninth tooth and the marginal teeth 
begin at the eleventh tooth. There are over eighty rows of teeth. 
The intermediate teeth sometimes begin at the tenth tooth. 
GENITALIA: In all respects like those of typical palustris. The 
retractors of the male organ vary slightly in size, but otherwise the 
organs are very uniform. (Pl. XV, fig. G.) 
Several dissections gave the following result (dissection No. 23597 
and No. 23617), which is markedly uniform: 
Ret. Ret. Prost. 
Penis. Penis-sac. penis. penis-sac. Rec.sem. duct. Vas. def. Shell. 
2.50 2.10 2.00 1.00 4.00 5.00 13.25 19.00 
2.60 2.10 1.25 1.25 4.00 5.00 13.00 19.00 
2.60 2.10 1.50 1.50 4.00 5.00 14.50 19.00 
RANGE (Figure 36): Southern Wisconsin to eastern New York; 
central Michigan south to northern Illinois and northern Ohio. 
Jolictensis occupies an area along the borders of the humid divi- 
sions of the Transition and Upper Austral life zones. It appears to 
be typical of the drainage of the Great Lakes, being confined to the 
area bordering the Canadian and Upper Mississippian regions. 
RECORDS. 
UNITED STATES. 
Ittrnois: Rock Run, Joliet, Will Co. (Ferriss); Berry Lake, Cook Co. 
(Higley) ; south of Wolf Lake, Cook Co. (Jensen); Elgin, Kane Co.; Crystal 
Lake, McHenry Co. (Nason). 
