HELIX NEMORALIS. 283 
Puiocene.—In East Suffolk, it is recorded by Prof. J. Morris from the 
Coralline crag at Sutton and Gedgrave ; it has also been found in the Red 
Crag at Butley pit near Orford (Sci. Goss., July 1889). 
In France, Locard records this species from the Lower Pliocene strata of 
Hauterive, Drdéme. M. Bouillet says it is rather common in Auvergne in 
the compact “‘travertin” of the ‘l'ambour, on the left bank of the Aller, near 
Martres-de-Veyre ; in those at Bard, near St. Germain-Lembron, and in 
the greenish clays covering the tufa. It is also present in the deposits 
of the Quercy, the Agenais, and at Sancats and Bordeaux, Gironde; also 
in the neighbourhood of Lyons, Khone ; and Dax in the Landes. 
In Holland, it is reported from the Plocene by Mr. J. Wilfrid Jackson. 
PLEIsTocENE.—In South Devon, it was found by Mr. Pengelly during 
his explorations of Happaway Cavern, near 'l'orquay. 
In South Wilts. it is recorded by Mr. 'l'rovey Blackmore from the loess 
of Fisherton Anger near Salisbury. 
In Dorset, it is recorded by Rev. R. Ashington Bullen from a late 
Pleistocene deposit on Portland Bill. 
In West Sussex, it is recorded by Mr. J. P. Johnson from beds exposed 
at low tide on the foreshore at West Wittering. 
In Cambridge, Mrs. McKenny Hughes records the fasciate forms as 
common in the gravel deposits at Barnwell Abbey, Grantchester, and Bar- 
rington, all in the vicinity of Cambridge. 
In West Kent, it is recorded from the lacustrine mammalian beds at 
Erith and Maidstone ; Prof. Boyd Dawkins has noted it from the lower 
brick-earth at Stoneham’s Pit, Crayford, from which place Mr. b. B. Wood- 
ward has recorded very large specimens, one being 29 mill. in diameter. 
Mr. W. J. Lewis Abbott has found numerous specimens in the Ightham 
fissure near Wrotham, which though exhibiting great variety were generally 
more depressed and larger than recent shells, specimens 24 mill. in diameter 
being common, and five-banded shells forming sixty-two per cent. of the 
whole number found. 
In South Essex, Prof. Morris records it from the elephant-bed at Uphall 
brickfield, Ilford; Dr. Corner and Mr. Hinton note it from the sandy layer 
beneath the brick-earth, at the same place, and also in Sam Green’s Pit. 
Mr. W. 'l’. Blanford found specimens in the sections disclosed during the 
excavations for the Victoria and West India Docks ; and Mr. Worthington 
G. Smith has found it in the sandy deposits of the Lea Valley. In North 
Essex, it is recorded from Harwich by the late Dr. 8. P. Woodward, and 
by Prof. Morris from the lacustrine beds associated with mammalian 
remains at Grays, Copford, and Clacton. 
In Middlesex, it has been found by Mr. W. G. Smith on the “Paleolithic 
floor” at Stoke Newington near Clapton railway station. 
- In Salop, it is reported by Mr. W. Whitwell from amongst the deeply 
buried Roman pottery, unearthed at Wroxeter, the ancient Uriconium. 
In Mid-Lancashire, it has been found by Mr. J. Wilfrid Jackson amongst 
the cave-earth of the Dog Holes, Warton Crag, near Uarnforth. 
In South-East Yorks., it is recorded by Mr. ''homas Sheppard from 
the beds at Bealsbeck, near Market Weighton, associated with bones of 
the mammoth, ete. 
