484 ANNALS OF THE CARNEGIE MUSEUM. 
wrong habitats of some of the shells collected by himself, or marked 
them ‘hab.?’ in order to mislead the monographers and make as 
many species as possible. He did not appear to care so much about 
shells in a scientific point of view as to possess the largest collection 
in the world. Nothing vexed him so much as having any one doubt 
the validity of any of zs new species, which he selected, generally 
three of each, from his stock of duplicates. He was also in the habit 
of changing the author’s types whenever he obtained what he sup- 
posed to be better specimens. No doubt in most cases he was right 
in replacing the same species. Still, they were not the author’s 
types.”’ 
Under the same date Garrett quotes a letter from Pease, written Apr. 
21, 1870. ‘**I shall close up my monograph of Partula as soon as I 
receive another consignment from Australia, by which I shall receive 
several species from New Hebrides and Solomon Islands I am desirous 
of seeing. I make out ninety-four species, of which the localities of 
eighty are known, viz., fifty-nine Polynesia and twenty-one Papuan. 
*k *& *k T have divided the several species into typical groups and given 
their range of distribution and variation. You have credit over your 
initials for your notes, and sometimes a little more.’’’ Mr. Garrett 
adds: ‘‘I wrote to a friend in the Sandwich Islands, shortly after 
Pease’s death, to try and get the MSS. They could not be got. I 
suppose they were sold with his splendid library.”’ 
Oct. 10, 1882: ‘* With regard to Polynesian land shells I have 
seen nothing to convince me that food has anything to do with the 
color of the shell. P?. vosea and varia, which are the most variable in 
color, may in some localities be seen in countless numbers on dif- 
ferent species of shrubs and ferns, old and young of the different 
colored varieties on the same plant. The same may be said of all the 
species, ground as well as arboreal.’’ 
Feb. 12, 1883: ‘‘ Long ago I wrote you in regard to the con- 
fusion of Pease’s duplicates, caused by the hurried packing by persons 
who knew nothing of the importance of keeping the duplicates separ- 
ate. ** * ** Pease himself was very careless, and his children, as he 
wrote me, amused themselves ‘sorting his duplicates,’ which were in 
cigar boxes.”’ 
Nov. 25, 1883: ‘*I am inclined to believe that many species which 
are really distinct—especially in the land-shells—gradually merge into 
each other, just as some genera intergrade.’’ 
