a 
188 PYRAMIDULA ROTUNDATA. 
Monmouth—Wynd Cliff, Chepstow, April 1999 ! F. H. Sikes. 
Worcester—Duidley Castle (Tye, Quart. J. of Conch., 1874, p. 69). Sparkbrook 
near Birmingham ! W. Nelson. 
Glamorgan—Swansea and other places (Jeffreys, Brit. Coneh., 1862, p. 219). 
Pembroke— Under stones, by ditch, Giltar, Tenby (Stubbs, J. of C., 1900, p. 323). 
Notts: —Enumerated for the county (B.S. Dodd, Brit. Ass. List, 1893, p. 73). 
Lincoln N.—Jericho Plantation, Oxcombe, May 1902; a variety with scalarid 
whorls, alt. 6 mill., at North Reston near Louth, July 1900, C. S. Carter. 
Lancashire S.—Near Warrineton, Oct. 1885, T. D. A. Cockerell. Farineton, 
Oct. 1888, W. H. Heathcote. Whalley, Aug. 1888 ! E. Collier. 
York S.W.—Rare, Elland, J. Whitwham. Stanley Wood, Cubley near Penis- 
tone, May 1890, L. E. Adams. Cudworth, March 1903, W. E. Brady. Went Hill 
near Pontefract, W. and E. Brown. 
York Mid W.—Kirkstall Abbey ! and Tadeaster, May 1877! H. A. Crowther. 
York N.W.—Tantfield, March 1880 ! 
Westmorland & Lake Lancs.—Cartmel (H. Beeston, J. of Conch., 1908, p. 201). 
Isle of Man—Moderately common on the island, L. E Adams. 
SCOTLAND. 
Renfrew—Shielhill Glen, 1883 ! T. Scott. 
Perth Mid—Quarry Mill den near Perth, H. Coates. 
IRELAND. 
Antrim—Shane’s Castle Park, a specimen with height and diameter equal 
(Thompson, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., Sept. 1840, p. 31). Cushendun, May 1897, 
Lionel E. Adanis. 
Dublin—Not uncommon in greenhouse, Bushey Park (Welch and Stelfox, Irish 
Nat., 1904, p. 124). ; 
Limerick— Roxborough and Ballycloneh, H. Fogerty. 
Cork S.—Near Macroom, May 1902, P. H. Grierson. 
Kerry—Near St. Finian’s ‘‘ holy-well,” J. Ray Hardy. 
CONTINENTAL DISTRIBUTION. 
Germany—A high-spired specimen resembling //. conica at Schlossberg, Bieden- 
kopf, in Nassau (Kobelt, Nassau List, 1871). Sub-var. globosa, Hamburg (Wester- 
lund, Faun. Eur., 1876, p. 37). 
France —H. rotundata var. scalaris Fer. tabulated for Western and Southern 
France by Grateloup. 
Italy—Marchese Paulucci records a variety with greatly elevated spire, and 
quite solariid in form, in company with type, from the cellars of the Benedictine 
Convent at Soriano in Calabria. 
Sweden—Sub-var. g/obosa, Borgholm in Oeland (Westerlund, Faun. Eur., 1876, 
ee): 
I VARIATION IN COLOUR OF SHELL. 
Var. alba Moquin-T'andon, Hist. Moll., 1855, p. 107. 
Helix rotundata var. a Férussac, Tabl. Syst.. 1822, p. 4b. 
Zonites radiatus var. 3 Leach, Syn., 1832, p. 74. 
Helix votundata var. translucens Dixon and Watson, Man. Brit. Shells, 1838, p. 42. 
Patula rotundata var. albina Westerlund, Exp. Crit. Moll., 1871, p. 60. 
Helix rotundata var. pallida Baudon, Journ. de Conch., 1884, p. 231. 
SHELL white, often tinged with greenish or yellowish, and quite destitute of the 
flammular markings so perceptible in the typical form. 
This pretty variety is frequently found in colonies, and was formerly considered 
a very rare form; the absence of decaying wood about its haunts has been advanced 
by Herr Clessin as a cause of the variation, 
Specimens vary from pure white to those showing a greenish or yellowish tinge, 
the latter leading to the var. pallida of Baudon, which is described as ‘whitish, 
with almost imperceptible yellowish markinys,” and may properly be regarded as 
a sub-variety,. but must not be confounded with dead shells, which under some 
conditions may be found of a whitish colour with pale brownish blotches. 
ENGLAND AND WALES. 
Channel Isles—One specimen in Sark, July 1886, J. R. le B. Tomlin, 
Cornwall W.—St. Mary’s, Scilly Isles, Aug. 1903 ! F. H. Sikes. 
Cornwall E.—West Looe, April 1909 ! A. H. Jowett-Murray. 
Devon S.—Near Plymouth, J. C. Bellamy, 1837. Torcross, Aug. 1885, F. G. Fenn. 
Topsham and Culverhole, Aug. 1892, Lionel . Adams. 
Devon N.—In marvellous abundance, with hardly any admixture of type, in 
a small dell on the cliff to the east of Hele Bay, Ilfracombe ! J. R. le B. Tomlin. 
Local but plentiful at Lynton (F. J. Partridge, Journ. of Conch., 1898, p. 19). 
Countesbury, Aug. 1892, Lionel E. Adams. 
