466 ANNALS OF THE CARNEGIE MUSEUM. 
specimen, and the other isan adult shell, different from the one on the 
card ; this may have been an example loaned by Dr. Cox or Mr. Brazier 
and subsequently returned. Probably the specimens were sent by Mr. 
Brazier, June 15, 1882, as appears from his letter of that date. He 
states that he collected them at Vate or Sandwich Island. 
4288. ‘‘Partula pfeiffert Crosse, Havanna Harbour, Vate Island, 
N. Hebrides.’” Two specimens, one marked on the shell ‘‘20.’’ A 
synonym of P. caledonica. Crosse proposed the name /fe7ffer7, as 
caledonica is a misnomer. 
Norrs.—Partula brazieri Pse. Not represented in the Hartman 
collection. Dr. Hartman, in his Bibliographical Catalogue and in 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc., 1885, p. 222, places it among the synonyms of 
P. caledonica Pfr. Mr. Brazier wrote, Jan. 18, 1885: ‘‘It was in 
1879 (?) Isent the whole of my Partulas to Pease and in the lot 
one that I obtained at Tutuila, Navigators, only a single specimen, 
which he described and figured as P. érazzev7 ; he having died shortly 
after I never received the specimen back.’’ Dr. Hartman alludes to 
this, Proc: Acad. Nat. Sc, Phila., 1885, pp.. 222) 203, and adds): 
‘¢'The example in the Coll. Acad. Nat. Sc., labeled P. dvazzert Pease, 
ex auctore, is of the New Hebrides type, and agrees with my example 
of turnert’’ (caledonica?). In his MS. work Dr. Hartman treats P. 
braztert as a valid species. Garrett, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Phila., 
1887, p. 12, doubts its having been obtained at Tutuila. In a letter, 
Sept. 8, 1880, he expresses the same doubt and adds: ‘‘ Pease was 
very careless in regard to localities. He says it belongs to the conica 
group, but his figure proves that it belongs to the New Hebrides 
type.’’ 
Partula turricula Pse. Not represented in the Hartman collection. 
In memoranda by Dr. Cox, about 1881, he observes that the New 
Hebrides habitat attributed to this species wants confirmation. It is 
given with doubt in Dr. Hartman’s papers and in his MS. work. ‘The 
species has never been figured. See No. 4291. 
4289. ‘¢ Partula carnicolor Hartm.,.Aura Island, N. Hebrides.’’ 
Four specimens, including two immature. Types of Dr. Hartman’s 
description, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sc. Phila., 1888, p. 250, Pl. XIII, Fig. 
2 (the more elongate of the two adults). A slip pasted on the back 
of the card has, in Mr. Layard’s handwriting: ‘‘ Partula, No. 407, 
Aura Isld.. N. Hebrides. Scarce, very few received. I send one 
adult and one young to show epidermis.’’ Probably the other ex- 
