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Miscellanies. 193 
that a meeting of the scientific men of Italy would be held at Pisa, in 
Oct. next, and inviting the Society to send a delegate to the meeting. 
Dr. Patterson communicated the decease of Mr. Francis Nichols, a 
member of the Society, on the 7th of July. 
Dr. Bache also announced the decease of Dr. John Newnam, for- 
merly of Salisbury, N. Carolina, a member of the Society. 
The following candidates were declared duly elected members of 
the Society :— 
Tuxop. Romeyn Brcx, M. D., of Albany. 
Ricuarp C. Tayxor, of Philadelphia. : 
August 16, 1839.—A communication from the foreign Secretary of 
the Royal Society of London, in relation to magnetic observations was 
referred to the astronomical committee. 
Dr. Dunglison described the appearances which he had witnessed, 
in company with Professor Silliman, after the tornado of the 3ist ul- 
timo, at New Haven. The evidences appeared to him to favor the 
idea of a gyratory motion. The direction of the storm was from 
south-west to north-east. 
Mr. Justice described a similar tornado which had occurred on the 
Same day, fifteen miles north of Philadelphia, showing evidence, in 
his opinion, of a similar movement of gyration. 
2. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History. Com- 
piled from the records of the Society, by Jerrrizs Wyman, M. D., 
Recording Seeretary. : 
June 5, 1839.—J. E. Tescnemacuer, Esq. in the chair. 
Dr. A. A. Goutp read a communication from Prof. C. B. Adams, 
giving the description of a shell found at East Boston, and called by 
him Delphinula minor ; it was not referred to the genus Delphinula, 
however, without some hesitation. Dr. Gould having made a more 
extended examination was induced to consider it as identical with 
Helix corpuloides, Montagu; and that it came under Brown’s new 
genus Delphinoidea. ; 
Pe 
_.. Mr. T. J. Wuirremore read a report on the specimens of Planor- 
bis corpulentus presented to the society by Prof. C. B. Adams. 
Were collected from the Otter Creek, Middlebury Vt., and the species 
is described in the appendix to Long’s second expedition. The cor- 
pulentus is closely allied to the trivolvis. The former however is 
much less rounded on the sides of the whorls; carine are more prom- 
inent and the upper side is much more flattened horizontally ; the shell 
is larger and higher in proportion to its width, and the aperture ex- 
tends both above and below its penultimate whorl.—Habitat, in shal- 
Vol. xxxvin1, No, 1.—Oct.—Dec. 1839. > 
