24 LAND AND FRESHWATER 
not the same locality. They are about the same size,and had been 
labelled G. tenwispora? by Blanford, but they are not like the 
Teria Ghat examples with which I have compared them. 
Griessuts (Rismerra ?) sarrssa, Bs., var. No. 3566 B.M. 
Locality. Barowl Gorge, Durrang District, Assam (Godwin- 
Austen). 
Shell as in last; sculpture indistinct, fine longitudinal ribs 
follow below the suture; colour pale dull ochraceous, two closely 
parallel whitish bands below the suture; suture impressed ; whorls 
8, regularly increasing ; columellar margin concave. 
Size: maj. diam. 6°0; length 16°25 mm. 
Only a single specimen. 
GiessuLA (RisHeETrA ?) sartssa, Bs., var. 
From Koliaghur, Granite Tila, near Tezpur, on the left bank of 
the Brahmaputra,a single specimen very close to this species was 
found by me; smooth, with little sculpture. No. 3568 B.M. 
(Plate CLXI. fig. 8.) 
Apex (Pl. CLXITI. fig. 19). 
From Gowhathi (No. 3383 B.M.), two specimens, the apex is yet 
more acuminate (vide Pl. CLXIII. fig. 17), but there is little 
difference to be noted in the general shape. 
Guirssuta suBHEBES, Nevill MS., n. sp. (Plate CLXI. fig. 6; 
Plate CLXIYV. apex, fig. 1.) 
Locality. Pichola nulla, Dafla Hills. No. 1618 B.M. Type. 
Five examples (Godwin-Austen). No. 3341 B.M., Dafla, typical. 
Shell oblong turreted, thin, smooth, glassy; sculpture: rather 
distant and fine striation, slight tendency to crenulation at suture ; 
colour very pale ochraceous ; spire long, sides slightly convex, apex 
blunt, 3 first whorls nearly equal; suture impressed ; whorls 10, 
with well-marked flat convexity; aperture narrowly ovate; 
eolumella with a very slight curve downward, 
Size: maj. diam. 5:0; length 15°75 mm. 
From the eggs in tube containing shells it is oviparous. 
‘This species is entered by Nevill in the interleaved copy (facing 
p. 167) he left to me shortly before his death, from the above 
locality. He gives the dimensions of a specimen in the Indian 
Museum which he received from me: ‘‘ 153 x5 mm., anfr. 9.” 
It is the Achatina (Glessula) hebes in my paper on the peels 
of the Dafla Hills (lore Asiat. Soc. Bengal, vol. xlv. pt. 2, 1876, 
p. 315), and was a common shell. 
Very fortunately I have received from the Indian Museum, for 
which I have to thank Dr. N. Annandale, the specimens of Glessula 
included under Nv. 80 of Nevill’s ‘Hand-list,’ i. p. 170. They 
comprise ten glass-tubes, numbered :— 
