434 Bibliographical Notice. 
Fig. 7. Left valve, exterior view, natural size. Woodhall, water of Leith ; 
cabinet of Dr. Traquair. 
Fig. 8. Interior view of fig. 7: a, central undivided tooth; b, anterior 
tooth; c, elongated posterior tooth; d, anterior adductor scar ; 
e, posterior adductor scar; f, pallial line; g, internal oblique 
ridge. 
Fig. 9. Right valve, interior view, natural size. Woodhall, water of 
Leith; cabinet of Dr. Traquair. a, large anterior tooth; 6, 
elongated posterior tooth. 
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE. 
Fossil Inland Shells from Dalmatia, Croatia, and Slavonia. By 
Sprripion Brusina, Director of the Zoological Department of the 
National Museum of the Triune Kingdom, &c. &e. German en- 
larged edition of the Croatian Memoir in the “ Rad” of the South- 
Slavonian Academy of Sciences and Art at Agram. 8vo, pp. 144, 
with 7 plates. Agram: 1874. (Fossile Binnen-Mollusken aus 
Dalmatien &c.) 
Tue collection of fossils here described and illustrated consists of 
20,000 specimens, from about 30 localities, carefully enumerated. 
There are 139 species (109 Gasteropoda and 30 Conchifera), of which 
49 are either new or were little known, and 11 are now much more 
fully determined than heretofore. Only 10 require either better 
preserved specimens for illustration or further books of reference for 
the author to make his determinations certain, namely :—Hyalina, 
1; Helix, 1; Limnea, 2; Planorbis, 3; Pisidium, 1; Dreissena, 
2 species. Of the remaining 129, 13 are still living in Dalmatia, 
Croatia, or Slavonia, namely : — 
Melanopsis Esperi, Fér. Succinea oblonga, Drap. 
acicularis, Fér. Helix pomatia, LZ. 
Lithoglyphus fuscus, Zieg. Ancylus lacustris, L. 
Bythinia tentaculata, L. Spherium lacustre, Mi//. 
Valvata piscinalis, Mil. Pisidium amnicum, Miill. 
Neritina danubialis, C. Pfeif. Dreissena polymorpha, Pall. 
Succinea elegans, [isso. 
And 4 live still in other parts of Europe :— 
Melanopsis premorsa, L. Melanopsis maroccana, Chem. 
costata, Fér. Hydrobia stagnalis, Bast. 
The remaining 112 species are extinct ; and of these, 24 had been 
already described by Brongniart, Partsch, Férussac, Krauss, Fuchs, 
Bielz, Braun, Thome, Hornes, and others; whilst 41 have been 
described mostly by Neumayr in 1869, and by Brusina in this 
memoir, The distribution of the species in the Three Kingdoms, and 
their relationship to recent forms, are carefully shown. 
