Mazycx: Mouuusca or SoutH CAROLINA 7 
90. var. major Binn. Two remarkably fine 
specimens from Ladson’s Plantation, Santee River, given me by 
Dr. Edmund Ravenel, 1863. 
91. andrewsae W. G. Binn. Rare. Caesar’s Head! 
92. appressa Say. Common in the mountains. 
Columbia, Miss Marion Mazyck, 1909. 
93. auriculata Say.* (Gibbes ’48.) 
94. auriformis Bld. Rare. St. John’s, Berkeley, Dr. 
Ravenel. 
95. barbigera Redf.* Calhoun Falls, coll. Bryant 
Walker, Detroit, Mich. 
96. cereolus Muhlf., var. St. Lawrence Cemetery, 
Charleston. 
97. espiloca Rav. Common. Sullivan’s Island! 
98. exoleta Binn.? One specimen, Seneca! — 
99. fallax Say (introferens Bld.). Spartanburg, 
C. H. Drayton, 1874. White Pond, Miss Childs. 
100. hirsuta Say Rare. Oconee County! 
101. hopetonensis Shuttl. Abundant. 
102. var. charlestonensis n. var. Rather un- 
common. 
This variety differs from the ordinary form of hopetonensis, in being much 
more depressed and only about two-thirds its diameter. The upper 
tooth of the peristome is proportionately broader and more like that of 
P. vultuosa in shape. A specimen from Charleston, submitted to Mr. 
Thomas Bland some thirty years ago, was returned by him labelled 
“Triodopsis hopetonensis?? NO. T. B.’’ Others from St. Helena’s 
Churchyard, Beaufort, were returned by Dr. Pilsbry with the sugges- 
tion that the form was at least worthy of varietal distinction. 
103. inflecta Say. Rare. 
104. lawae Lewis. Rare. White Pond, Miss Childs. 
105. obstricta Say.* (Binney ’85, p. 286.) 
106. var. carolinensis Lea.* ‘Near Cheraw” 
(Lea 34, p. 102). 
107. postelliana Bld. Rather common. 
108. pustula Fer. Rather rare. Old Rifle Range, 
Charleston! Mt. Pleasant! 
