a 
36 HYALINIA CELLARIA. 
and also at Muhlhausen in Thuringia.” It is also stated to have been 
found in the Mid Pleistocene Valley loess of Oberweier, near Rastadt in 
Baden, and in the Pleistocene tufaceous deposits near Regensburg, Bavaria. 
In France, Mons. A. Locard reports it from the Upper Pleistocene beds 
at Santenay, Cote d’Or. 
In Denmark, it is reported by Mr. A. Santer Kennard as obtained from a 
kitchen-midden at Meilgard. 
In Italy, it is recorded by Issel from the breccia of probably Pleistocene 
age at Spotorni and Verzi in Western Liguria. 
Hoxocenr.—In Devonshire, this species is said by Mr. Santer Kennard 
to be found in deposits at Dawlish ; and has also been reported by Mansel- 
Pleydell from the tufaceous beds at Blashenwell, Dorset. In the Isle 
of Wight, Prof. Forbes recorded it from the lacustrine beds at 'Totland’s 
Bay near Yarmouth; Mr. Kennard from a Neolithic rainwash on St. 
Catherine’s Down; and Mr. Loydell from drift at Ventnor station inter- 
mixed with rounded flints and phosphatic nodules from a lower zone. 
In Sussex, it has been found at Eastbourne and at Cissbury. In Kent, 
it was collected by the Rev. R. Ashington Bullen im the deposit overlying 
the head or rubble drift at Barton Court, Buckland near Dover; while 
Mr. Kennard records it from the base of a rainwash, two to six feet 
thick, at Darenth, as well as from Maidstone, Charing, Otford, Exedown 
near Wrotham, and Charlton. In Surrey, it has been found by the Rey. 
R. Ashington Bullen in a Neolithic deposit at Reigate, and also in the 
Horseshoe deposit at Colley Pit near the same town; and Mr. Kennard 
records it for Walton Heath and Bermondsey. In Middlesex, 1t was found 
in the section disclosed by the excavations for the Admiralty Buildings at 
Westminster, and has also been collected at London Wall. In Essex, it 
has been recorded from the deposits at East Tilbury, Crossness, Shalford, 
toxwell, and Walthamstow; by Mr. French from alluvial shell-marl at 
Felstead; and has also been found commonly in the black earth and peat, 
and rarely in the shell-marl at Chignal St. James by Miller Christy. 
Mr. Kennard also reports its occurrence in the beds at Cleeve Hill and 
Westbury-on-Severn in Gloucestershire. In Nottinghamshire, Mr. C. I’. 
Musson found it in the black earth at Gotham Moor and also at Grass- 
thorpe ; and Dr. H. H. Corbett in the old lake deposit at Askern, near 
Doneaster, Yorkshire. 
In Ireland, it has been found in deposits at Cloughan Point, Belfast, co. 
Down; 'lempleogue, co. Dublin; the Warren, Achill Island, Mayo West ; 
Doe’s Bay, Galway West ; in the marl deposit at Marlfield, near Clonmel, 
South 'TMpperary ; at Drumeliffe Crannoge, co. Clare, where the specimens 
are said to attain fifteen mill. in diameter; and Mr. R. Welch has found 
them in shell-pockets on the sand-dunes in many Irish counties. 
In France, it is recorded from the “bréches osseuses,” near Bagnéres-de- 
Bigorre, Hautes Pyréneés, at an altitude of about 3,600 feet. 
In Belgium, it is common in the ourbe, Uecle lez-Bruxelles ; it has 
been fonnd at Mons in Hainault, also in the alluvium of the Valley of 
Dendre by Lecomte, and in the “ Ossements quaternaires” at Saint-Gilles- 
Bruxelles, by Delheid. 
In Germany, a slightly larger form of the var. stevers? Bottger (diam. 
84 mill.) has been found in a subfossil state at Schalkau in Thuringia. 
