86 HYALINIA PURA. 
GERMANY. 
Dispersed throughout the country, and is on record for Alsace, Baden, ~ 
Brandenburg, Bavaria, Bremen, Brunswick, Coburg, Franconia, Hanover, Hesse- 
Cassel, Holstein, Lippe-Detmold, Lusatia, Nassau, Oldenburg, Osnabruck, 
Pomerania, Posen, East and West Prussia, Suabia, Saxony, Silesia, Thuringia, 
Vogtland, Westphalia, and Wurtemburg. 
NETHERLANDS. 
Holland—Recorded by Jeffreys in 1881 as existing in the great wood between 
the Hague and Scheveningen in South Holland. 
Belgium—Recorded from Roumont, Luxemburg, by Purves; and noted by 
Lecomte as rare in the Bois-de-Lessines, Hainault. 
FRANCE. 
H. pura, though said to be most prevalent in the northern departments and 
provinees, has been recorded from Aisne, Ariége, Aube, Aude, Brittany, Chain- 
pagne Méridionale, Cote d’Or, Dréme, Haute Garonne, Haute Loire, Isere, Jura, 
Meuse, Morbihan, Nord, Normandy, Rhone, and Seine. 
The horn-coloured form (var. nitidosa) has been especially recorded from the 
Ain, Alpes Maritimes, Ardennes, Hautes Pyrénées, Isere, Meuse, Oise, Pyrénées- 
Orientales, and Savoy. 
SWITZERLAND. 
Recorded from the cantons of Glarus, Grisons, Solothurn, Unterwalden, Valais 
and Vaud ; while the var. nitidosa is known from Berne, Grisons, Schwyz, Unter- 
walden, Valais, and Vaud. 
INAULYG, 
Said to be diffused over the mainland and the islands, being noted for Emilia, 
Piedmont, Rome, and the Islands of Sardinia and Sicily. The latter record is on 
the authority of Benoit, but the Marchese di Monterosato denies the occurrence of 
the true H. pura in Sicily. 
AUSTRO-HUNGARY. 
Recorded from Bohemia, Carniola, Galicia, Goritz, Moravia, and Tyrol. It has 
also been reported from Tatra Mountains in North Hungary, but this occurrence 
has not been confirmed, and is doubted by Herr Hazay. The var. nitidosa has 
been especially noted as found in Carinthia, Styria, and Tyrol. 
SPAIN. 
H. pura is cited by Chia from San Daniel near Gerona, in Catalonia ; while 
Graells in 1846 recorded as Helix nitidula a species of Hyalinia from the Eastern 
Provinces of Spain, but this is ascribed to H. pura by Prof. J. G. Hidalgo of Madrid. 
SCANDINAVIA. 
Norway—Recorded by Miss Esmark from Romsdalen in Trondhjem ; Manger 
in Bergen ; Eker and Langesund in Christiansand, and Christiania. 
Sweden—F ound sporadically over Middle and Southern Sweden as far north as 
Dalarne. The provinces of Skane, Blekinge, Smaland, Bohuslin, Ostergétland, 
Westergétland, Orebro, and the Island of Gothland are especially recorded as 
inhabited by this species. 
Denmark—<According to Mr. Henrik Sell, it is quite common on Zealand at 
Slagelse, Helsingor, and other localities in the north of the island. On Funen it 
has been found at Nyborg, Kongebro Skov, and other places. On the peninsula of 
Jutland, it oceurs at Veile in Ribe, Silkeborg in Aarhuus, and at Viborg. 
RUSSIA. 
Probably diffused over the southern and western region, and has been reported 
as H. pura or H. nitidosa from Crimea, Caucasus, Kovno, Poland, St. Petersburg, 
Volhynia, the province of Abo in Finland, and Revel in Esthland, also from the 
Black Sea to the shores of the Caspian in Trancaucasia. 
SIBERTA. 
H. pura is recorded by Middendorf from the Stanovoi Mountains, but Westerlund 
denies its occurrence in Siberia and affirms the specimens to be H. hammonis of 
Strom. He equally dissents from the identification by Sehrenk as H. pura of the 
shells found by Maack in Amourland. 
