230 ()::jiterly Journal of Conchology, 



of the Cones is given, Conns marmot eiis being the species in 

 question this time. (^This fact has now been abundantly con- 

 firmed, there can be no further doubt on this pointj. 



Three coloured plates, representing 22 species, accompany 

 this interesting number of MM. Crosse &; Fischers Journal. 



C. P. G. 



VERTIGO MOULINSIANA, Dupuy. 



[From the Annals of Natural History.] 



This interesting and local little land shell has been lately discov- 

 ered by Mr. Henry Groves, while botanizing, in a small marsh be- 

 tween Winchester and Southampton. See " British Conchology," 

 I., p. 256, and V. (^Suppl. j p. 106. Mr. Grove's specimens are rather 

 more swollen or barrel-shaped than mine from the West of Ireland ; 

 and they agree exactly with some Danish specimens, for which I 

 am indebted to the kindness of Dr. Morch, as well as with the 

 descriptions and figures of Dupuy and Moquin-Tandon. Kiister 

 and Kreglinger called it /''. CI:arpniticn', after a jNIS. name given 

 by Shuttleworth. Heyneman described it as V. ventrosa, and 

 Westcrland as Pitpa Lilljeborgi. Dupuy's name ( MouUnsiaua ) 

 dates from 1849, and has niiority. — T. Gv.tx Teffreys. 



HELIX F/SANA.—^lxM.i er. 

 By C}. Sherriff Tye. 



While in Guernsey in the summer of 1S76, I found this species 



