50 AMERICAN JOURNAL 



Proceedings Boston Society of Natural History. Pp. 145—160. 1868 



Prof. Bickmore exhibited a specimen of Nautilus pompiHus 

 in alcohol, collected by him at Amboina, which is the only speci- 

 men ever brought to this country. It has been commonly believed 

 that the Nautilus occasionally rises to and swims on the surface 

 of the water, but after repeated inquiries of the natives, Prof. 

 B. became satisfied that the animal never rises from the bed of 

 the sea. The Malays collect them for food. 



Annals of the Lyceum of Natural History. IX. Nos. 1 — 4. New 

 York. 1868. 



Notes on certain Terrestrial Mollusca, with description of 

 new species. By Thomas Bland. 



This paper details the interesting discovery of the presence of 

 a jaw in the animal of various species of Cylindrellidse, so that 

 Crosse's genus Eucalodium, originally separated from the family 

 on account of the presence of the jaw, must now revert to it again. 



Prof. Gabb's Cyl. Newcomhiana, published in this Journal iii, 

 237, t. 16, f. 3 — 4, belongs to the genus Eucalodium, which will 

 embrace the large Mexican species. Gabb's name, however, is 

 a synonym, as the same species was described by Pfeiffer, Proc. 

 Zool. Soc, 1861, 27, t. 2, f. 7, as Qlausilia {Balea ?) Taylori. 



Descriptions of Twelve New Species of Unionldae from South 

 America, &c., &c. By Isaac Lea, L.L.D. 8vo., 32 pp. Phila. 1868. 



This paper contains reprints of all of Mr. Lea's papers, (14 

 in number), published in the Proceedings of the Academy of 

 Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, from March 1866 to June 



1868. 



II.— FOREIGN. 



ENGLISH. 



Journal of the Linnean Society. Zoology. Vol. 10. No. 38. London. 



1868. 



On the Anatomy and Physiology of the Tunicata. By 

 Albany Hancock, F.L.S. 



Annals and Magazine of Natural History. 4th Series. Vol. 2. No. 

 8. London. Aug., 1868. 



On Spirifer cuspidatus. By Dr. W. B. Carpenter. 



