CACILIOIDES. LES 
At Miller’s Dale, Derbyshire, living specimens have 
been taken under loose friable earth near the riverside. 
It is found in the south of England as far west as 
Somerset, and as far north as Northumberland; 
it is recorded locally for Ireland, and I found it some 
years ago in Anglesea. It does not seem to have been 
found in Scotland. 
Genus —STENOGYRA Shuttleworth. 
Shell imperforate, elongately turreted; apex obtuse; whorls 
numerous ; afertzve oval ; colwmella straight, thin. 
S. GoopALL Miller. Pl. V., f. 12. 
Pyramidal, tapering ; transparent white, slightly giossy, striated 
in line of growth ; whorls 6. A.6mm. B. 2 mm. 
In Gray’s ‘ Turton’ 1840, the following extract occurs: 
“This shell was first introduced into the Fauna and 
indeed first described in 1822 by Mr. Miller, who found 
it in some pine-beds at Bristol; it is also common in the 
same situations in the neighbourhood of London, 
especially in Kensington Palace Garden, and has been 
found near Manchester by Mr. Williamson. It was first 
observed by the late Mr. Drummond, the botanist, in 
1816, who was in the habit of feeding them; and when 
he wanted a supply, he merely placed a flat board upon 
the surface of the tan and left two or three dead worms 
beneath it, and never failed of finding it covered with 
them in a few days.” 
It has also established itself at Preston (Lancs.), 
I 
