MOLLUSCA OF INDIA. él 
An example rather more tumid was received from Capt. Oakes 
(No. 5158 B.M.), and one came from near the Serpo River bridge 
(No. 3053 B.M.). 
GunssuL4 aBorENsIs, G.-A. 3103 B.M. Type. (Plate CXLII. 
fig. 4.) 
Rec. Indian Museum, 1918, vol. viii. pt. xii. No. 49, p. 618. 
Locality. Abor Hills ; five specimens (Capt. G. F. 1’. Oakes, R.E.). 
Original description :—‘ Shell elongately turreted, sides nearly 
straight ; sculpture: very regular striation, less apparent on the 
last whorl; colour dark chestuut-brown in the type-shell, more 
ochraceous in others; spire attenuate, apex blnnt; suture im- 
pressed; whorls 8, sides flatly convex; aperture ovate; peristome 
outer lip thin, with strong convexity ; columellar margin nearly 
straight, feeble, slightly truncated. 
‘Size: maj. diam. 5:0; alt. axis 16°25 mm. 
“This species varies in form, some being less attenuate, but all 
have the blunt apex and similar sculpture.” 
do. Garo, Kasi, and Jaintia Hilis. 
Glessula tenuispira, Bs. PI CILLXS fies ¢ 
v. 
subaculina, n. sp. Pl. CLIX. figs. 4, 9. 
=theobaldi, Hanley MS. 
garoense, n. sp. PU CIHLXe figs ld: 
small yar, Pl. CLIXX. fie. 11. 
manipurense, var. 
Pl. CLXI. fig. 18. 
{ TENE CMOS anes, 11h 
| Pl. CLX. figs. 14, 17, 18, 19, 20. 
subhastula, n. sp. 
Pl. CLX1V. figs. 16, 17. 
Pl. OLX. fig. 17. 
crasstlabris, Bs. 
var. nana, Pl. CLXIL. fig. 23. 
pyramis, Bs. Pl. CLX. fig. 24. 
hanleyi, 0. sp. Pl. CLXITI. fig. 16. 
solidus, n. sp. Pl. CLXILI. fig. 8. 
Jadukamia abnormis, n, sp. P]. CLX. figs. 22, 23. 
GLESSULA TENUISPIRA, Benson. 
Colonei Beddome, in his Monograph of the Genus (Pro. Malacol. 
Soc. vol. vil. 1906, p. 160), records this species from many localities 
all very distant from each other, viz., Darjiling, Pegu, N. Canara, 
Khasi, and Dafla Hills. In a paper by Benson in the ‘Annals and 
Magazine of Natural History’ (1860), he gives a list of all the 
Continental-Indian species of Achatina—in which A. tenuispira 
appears as from the Khasia Hills, Darjiling, and Burma; he says 
also “In Burmah Mr. Theobald got a variety of A. tenuispira on 
the banks of the Irawady.” I have for long doubted that this 
species has such an extended range. Beddome even goes further 
