SUE 2 Bee Na. 
Durine the period that the Monograph on the Inferior Oolite Gasteropoda has 
been in course of publication, a certain number of specimens have been noticed or 
procured too late to be recorded in their proper places. They are mostly rare 
forms, and in some cases the genus is doubtful. These it is now proposed 
somewhat briefly to describe, in most cases with a figure. See Plates XLIII and 
XLIV. 
436. PurPuROIDEA, species. Plate XLIV, fig. 9. 
A single fragment of a large Purpuroidea was recently obtained from the 
Lincolnshire Limestone at Rauceby. There is not enough material to constitute 
a species, but the circumstance is interesting from its being the only instance of 
Purpuroidea as yet recorded from the Inferior Oolite of this country. 
Though apparently differing from any of the Great Oolite species, it most 
nearly resembles P. Morrisea, Buvignier, which is the common form at 
Minchinhampton. Possibly also some of the Corallian species described by 
Buvignier, such as P. Moreana, may be near. 
437. Purpurina varicosa, Lycett, 1850. Not figured. 
1850. ‘TurBo vartcosus, Lycett. Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 2nd ser., vol. vi, p. 416. 
1853. — — — Proce. Cotteswold Field Club, vol. i, p. 77. 
The following is Lycett’s description :—‘‘ Turrited, whorls six, convex, each 
with four encircling, rounded and smooth costs, crossing about eight large 
longitudinal elevations, which pass rather obliquely from left to right: axis two 
lines.” 
From want of evidence ‘ Turbo” varicosus was not listed either by Morris 
