PYRAMIDULA ROTUNDATA, 193 
NETHERLANDS. 
Belgium—Quoted by M. Jules Colbeau and others from the provinces of 
Antwerp, Brabant, East and West Flanders, Hainault, Liége, Limburg, Luxem- 
burg, Namur, and the Grand Duchy of Luxemburg. 
Holland Reported by Heer Schepmann for Gelderland, Groningen, North and 
South Holland, Limburg, Utrecht, and Zealand. 
FRANCE. 
Distributed throughout the country and has been recorded from Ain, Aisne, 
Agenais, Allier, Alpes Maritimes, Aquitaine, Ardennes, Ariége, Aube, Aude, 
Auvergne, Aveyron, Basses Alpes, Basses Pyrénées, Calvados, Charente Inférieure, 
Cote @Or, Cotes du Nord, Finistére, Gard, Gers, Gironde, Haute Garonne, 
Haute Loire, Hantes Pyrénées, Haute Savoie, Hérault, Ille-et-Vilaine, Isere, 
Jura, Landes, Loire Inférieure, Lot, Lot-et-Garonne, Lozere, Maine-et-Loire, 
Manche, Meuse, Morbihan, Moselle, Nievre, Nord, Oise, Pas-de-Calais, Puy-de- 
Déme, Pyrénées Orientales, Rhéne, Sadne-et-Loire, Sarthe, Savoy, Seine, Seine 
Inférieure, Seine-et-Marne, Seine-et-Oise, Somme, Var, Vaucluse, Vendée, Vienne, 
Vosges, Yonne, and the Island of Corsica. 
ITALY. 
P. rotundata is diffused throughout the peninsula and islands, being recorded 
for Liguria, Piedmont, Lombardy, Venetia, Emilia, Tuseany, Umbria, Marches 
5. s ‘ : . z . WieeoayeL nce LES 3 
Abruzzi, Romana, Calabria, Campania, and the Islands of Sardinia and Sicily. 
> ? ’ 5) a 
AUSTRO-HUNGARY. 
Commonly diffused throughout the empire, records being known of its existence 
in Austria, Bohemia, Carniola, Carinthia, Galicia, Goritz, Hungary, Moravia, 
Transylvania, and the Tyrol. 
SPAIN AND PORTUGAL. 
Spain—Found in Aragon, Catalonia, Galicia, Mureia, Navarre, Santander and 
Soria in Old Castile, Pena de Orduna in the Basque provinces, Cordoba in Andalusia, 
and the Balearie Isles. 
Portugal— Enumerated by Morelet for Oporto in Minho. 
SWITZERLAND. 
Well distributed over the country, and has been recorded for the cantons of 
Aargau, Appenzell, Berne, Geneva, Glarus, Grisons, Lucerne, Neuchatel, St. Gall, 
Sehwyz, Ticino, Uri, Valais, Vaud, and Zurich. 
SCANDINAVIA. 
Norway—Apparently restricted to the more southern districts. It is recorded 
by Sars from Bergen ; from the Islands of Sarteré and Manger by Dr. von Martens; 
by Esmark from Laurvik near Christiania, and Brevik, Langesund, and Skien in 
Christiansand Stiff; while in South Trondhjem Mr. Stelfox found it, though 
rarely, in June 1£035, at Romsdal; and Dr. von Martens records it for the Island 
of Aalesund. 
Sweden—Common in the southern provinces, and extending as far north as 
Stockholm. Westerlund cites the species as found in Skane, Blekinge, Kalmar, 
Jénképing, Westergétland, Ostergétland, Gothenburg, and the Islands of Oeland 
and Gothland. 
Denmark—One of the commonest of Danish species, probably oceurring in 
every part, but according to Dr. Johansen has not yet been recorded from Ribe 
Stift in East Jutland. 
RUSSTA. 
Not recorded except from Poland and the Crimea. Dr. Boog Watson records its 
distribution as from Finland to Madeira; but Luther in his exhaustive work on 
the shells of Finland does not include this species. 
NORTH AFRICA AND ATLANTIC ISLES. 
Algeria—Var. wbietina recorded from Kabylia and the alluvium of the Harrach. 
Azores—St. Michael and Horta, Fayal Islands. 
Madeira—Probably introduced, but common in a garden above Funchal at an 
altitude of 2,000 feet; and a single specimen in the Rebeiro dos Socorridos (R. Boog 
Watson, Journ. de Conch., 1876, p. 222), 
30/7/09 M 
