HYGROMIA HISPIDA. 35 
SPAIN. 
Confined to the north of the country, and recorded from Catalonia, Galicia, and 
Aragon, by Prof. Hidalgo. 
AUSTRO-HUNGARY. 
Distributed throughout the empire, being recorded from Austria, Bohemia, 
Bosnia, Carinthia, Carniola, Croatia, Galicia, Goritz, Hungary, Illyria, Moravia, 
Silesia, Slavonia, Styria, Tyrol, Transylvania, and Vorarlberg. 
SWITZERLAND. 
Probably found throughout the country, and has been recorded for Appenzell, 
Aargau, Basel, Berne, Geneva, Grisons, Lucerne, Neuchatel, Schwyz, Solothurn, 
St. Gall, Uri, Valais, and Vaud. 
BALKAN PENINSULA. 
Roumania—Recorded from Brostheni in Moldavia by Clessin. 
Servia—Recorded by Moellendorff from Kosljanske Stene. 
SCANDINAVIA. 
Norway—Very common in places, as about Christiania, Christiansand, and 
Bergen, but not extending beyond 634 deg. north lat. 
Sweden—Common in the southern provinces, but not extending beyond 60 deg. 
north lat. It is recorded from Christianstad, Malmohus, Goteborg, and found also 
in Jénkoping, Smaland, Varmland, Blekinge, Nerike, Uplandia, Westergotland, 
Westmanland, ete., also on the Islands of Gothland and Oland. 
Denmark—Found throughout the kingdom, and also in the Faroes, the Isle of 
Bornholm, and Iceland. 
RUSSIA. 
Probably dispersed over the western, southern, and central parts, extending to 
62 deg. north latitude, and has been specifically recorded from Archangel, St. 
Petersburg, Caucasus, Courland, Esthland, Finland, Kaluga, Kharkov, Kursk, 
Lithuania, Livland, Moscow, Nijni-novgorod, Perm, Podolia, Poland, Smolensk, 
Taurida, Tchernigov, Vladimir, Volhynia, and Tiflis in Transcaucasia. 
SIBERIAN SUB-REGION. 
Siberia—Recorded by Middendorff from Beresov, Tobolsk ; and Barnaul, Tomsk ; 
by Maack from Irkutsk; by Gerstfeldt from the Issuri valley; by Mr. G. K. Gude 
from the Altai Mountains and Aral region ; and by Dr. Germain from the Amur. 
ASIA MINOR. 
Armenia—Recorded by Dr. C. A. Westerlund as having been found in Armenia. 
NORTH AFRICA. 
Algeria—M. Bourguignat records it as rare under stones at foot of trees near 
Mostaghanem. 
ATLANTIC ISLES. 
Azores—Recorded by Dr. Gwyn Jeffreys on the authority of Gerstfeldt. 
Madeira—Erroneously given by Dr. Jeffreys as Madeiran, owing to his mis- 
apprehension of Lowe’s Index. 
Canary Isles—Found at Las Palmas, Gran Canary, by Capt. W. J. Farrer. 
NEARCTIC REGION. 
Canada—Recorded by Dr. Pilsbry from Montreal, province of Quebec, and from 
Halifax, Nova Scotia. 
United States—Mr. J. H. Thomson recorded receiving specimens from near 
Gay Head, on the Island of Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, which differed only 
from European specimens in being ‘‘ thinner and lighter.” 
ORIENTAL REGION. 
Kashmir—Godwin-Austen found fossil shells in an alluvial deposit of probably 
interglacial age near the Indus river, at Kuardo, in Skardo. 
