APPENDIX—HYALINIA CELLARIA, 497 
In France, Mr. I’. H. Sikes has added to its known range the depart- 
ments of the Kure, Eure-et-Loir, Indre-et-Loire, Loir-et-Cher, and Sadne- 
et-Loire ; while M. Coutagne has recorded it as very common throughout 
the Bouches-du-Rhéne. 
In Norway. it is reported from Krageré, near Cliristiania, by Mr. H. Sell. 
ETHIOPIAN REGION. 
_ South Africa —Recorded by Major Connolly from Rondebosch and Kenilworth, 
Cape Peninsula. 
NEARCTIC REGION. 
United States—Recorded by Prof. T. D. A. Cockerell as common in greenhouses 
at Boulder, Colorado. 
Hyalinia cellaria (Miiller). 
1907 Vitvea (Hyalinia) hibernica Kennard & Bowell, Trish Nat., Novy., pp. 325-329, 
and pl. 42. 
1908) — _— scharffi Kennard & Bowell, Proc. Mal. Soc., March, pp. 50-56, and figs. 
The type specimens of this species are, according to Major Connolly, 
still preserved in the Miillerian collection deposited in the Zoological 
Museum of Copenhagen University. 
The shells of //. cellaria are occasionally found at Thrush-stones in 
Lincolnshire, according to observations of Rey. E. A. Woodruffe-Peacock. 
Geological History.—The records of its occurrence in the Holocene 
deposits have been increased by Messrs. Kennard and Woodward, who 
found specimens at Ightham, West Kent, in the old surface-soil at base of 
a grave of early Romano-British age in Stanley’s Quarry and commonly in 
a deposit at Allen’s Farm. 
In South Somerset, it was fonnd plentifully with human remains during 
the excavations by Mr. H. St. George Gray of Wick Barrow (Pixie’s 
Mound), Stoke Courcy, but by error were recorded as //. alliaria. Mr. 
Swanton also records it from Brean Down, near Weston-super-Mare. In 
North Somerset, Mr. Musson has recorded that there are specimens in the 
Bath Museum, found amongst powdered quartz, in two ‘stone coffins,” 
discovered buried 12 feet beneath the surface, at Bathwick Hill. 
In Bueks., Mr. J. E. Cooper detected it in the alluvial brick-earth at 
Boveney. 
In North Lineoln, Mr. J. 7. Musham has found it at Greetwell. 
In South-east Yorkshire, the Rev. E. P. Blackburn has recorded the 
finding of specimens by Mr. J. R. Mortimer in “barrows” of the Bronze 
age at Birdsall Brow, and at Willie Howe plantation, near Sledmere. 
In Mid-west Yorkshire, Mr. J. Wilfrid Jackson discovered it at Mitton 
Bridge, Ribblesdale. 
In Westmorland, Mr. J. Wilfrid Jackson records it from the lacustrine 
deposits about Hale and Burton-in-Nendal. 
In France, it has been found by M. Cardot in calcareous tufa at 
Malandry, Ardennes. 
Variation.—'he modifications of the shell of this species have at 
various times been elevated into distinct species upon more or less insuf- 
ficient grounds by different collectors ; but their claims to specific status 
are now generally disallowed by the consensus of matured opinion. 
