MIOCENE MOLLUSCA AND CRUSTACEA. 155 
Genus MONILEA Swainson. 
MoniILEA (LEIOTROCHUS) EBOREA. 
Plate xxiv, figs. 7-10. 
Trochus eboreus Wagner: Jour. Acad, Nat. Sci. Phila., ist ser., vol. 8, p. 52, Pl. I, 
fig. 5. 
Monilea (Leiotroch) cborea, Conrad: Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1862, p. 569; Meek, 
Check List Miocene Foss., p. 15. 
Turbo eboreus, Heilprin: Proce. Acad. Nat. Sei. Phila., 1877, pp. 398 and 404. 
“Shell smooth and slightly polished; spire short, conical; whorls flat- 
tened laterally, margined above by a very obtuse obsolete carina; spiral 
lines obsolete; periphery sharply angulated, subcarinated; base flattened, 
subumbilicated ; columella grooved; aperture half the length of the shell.” 
(Wagner, loc. cit.) 
This is one of the most beautiful fossil shells of the New Jersey Mio- 
cene formation. It is of small size, being not more than three-eighths of 
an inch in height, and having the greatest transverse diameter a little exceed- 
ing the height. The form is broadly conical, the spiral angle being always 
within ninety degrees, but sometimes almost reaching that angle. Volutions 
six in number, in the largest specimens, including the nuclear whorl, their 
surfaces polished and flattened in the direction of the spire, the last one being 
a little convex; periphery subangular with a slightly raised keel just above 
it, which shows as a raised band above the sutures of the upper volutions. 
There are also four or five raised spiral lines on the last two volutions and 
sometimes appearing even above that point; also fine transverse lines of 
growth mark the surface. Faint spiral lines also appear sometimes on the 
lower surface, which is very moderately convex. Aperture transverse, 
oblique, columella curved and thickened, with a single obsolete denticle 
near the base. Umbilicus closed. 
Formation and locality: Dr. Wagner's specimens came from the Mio- 
cene deposits along the Patuxent River, Maryland. The New Jersey spec- 
imens are from the gray marls of the same deposits at Jericho, N. J., where 
the shell appears to have been moderately common in comparison with 
most of the species. The specimens used are from the collections at the 
National Museum, and were collected by Mr. Frank Burns. 
