& 
10 CONTRIBUTIONS FROM THE CHARLESTON MusEUM 
132. — 
Charleston Bar. 
virginiana Con. Rare. Stomach of fish off 
Family VOLUTIDAE 
133. Maculopeplum junonia Hwass. While preparing this 
catalog, I have been greatly surprised to note that no mention is 
made in either edition of the catalog of the collection of Dr. 
Edmund Ravenel of the very rare Scaphella junonia Hwass, but 
the shell isin the Ravenel collection now in the Charleston Mu- 
seum. Dr. Ravenel told me in 1868 or 1869 that his Sullivan’s 
Island specimen had been drawn by Audubon on one of the plates 
of our shore birds for his great work on the Birds of North Amer- 
ica. A recent search for this figure has located it on plate 
CCCCIX in company with Sterna havellit Aud., one of our local 
gulls. No mention is made by Audubon of this shell. As the 
figure seems to have escaped the notice of students, this note 
may not be without interest. There is a fragment of M. junonia 
from our coast in the Gibbes collection at the University of South 
Carolina, Columbia, 8. C. Professor Gibbes includes it in his 
excellent list in the appendix to Tuomey’s Geology of South 
Carolina, most probably on the authority of Dr. Ravenel.’ 
134. Aurinia gouldiana Dall.* ‘Off South Carolina” (Dall 
’89b, p. 155). 
Family MITRIDAE 
135. Mitra granulosa Lam.* (Turner ’83, p. 301.) 
136. Fasciolaria distans Lam. Common. 
137. — gigantea Kiener. Rare. I have seen specimens 
from Waccamaw nearly 2 feet long. 
138. — tulipa Linn. Rather rare. 
139. Busycon canaliculatum Linn. Common. 
140. carica Linn. Common. 
141. eliceans Montf.* (Dall ’89a, p. 112.) 
142. perversum Linn. Less common than canalicu- 
latum and carica. A fine specimen in my collection from Pawley’s 
Island is 11 inches long. 
143. plagosum Con. 
3 Gibbes 748, p. xxiv. 
