TROPHON. 435 



Murex despectus, Shrot. Einleit. Conch, vol. i. p. 523, pi. 3, f. 5. 



„ dupUcatm, Donov. (changed from antiquus), Brit. Shells, vol. iv. pi. 119, 

 copied in Rees' Encyclop. pi. Elem. Conch. 1, f. 10; copied, 

 Wood, Index Testae, pi. 27, f. 93, as M. despecliis; copied. 

 Brown, Illust. Conch. G. B. pi. 6, f. 10, 13, as M. cari- 

 naius. 

 „ suhantiquatus, Maton and Rack. Trans. Linn. Sec. vol. viii. p. 147. — 

 DiLLW. Recent Shells, vol. ii. p. 727. 

 Ficsus despectus. Lam. Anim. s. Vert. (ed. Desh.) vol. ix. p. 448. — Desh. En- 

 cycl. Method. Vers, vol. ii. p. 159, — Kiener, Coq. Vivant. 

 Fusus, p. 29, pi. 19,f. 2. 

 Trikmium despeclum, var. varicoso-carittatu, Middend. Malac. Ross. pt. 2, 



p. 138. 



A boreal species (from Greenland, d-c.J included among our 

 native shells in the various compilations of British Concliology. 

 The carinatus appeared without any assigned locality ; the ori- 

 ginal specimen, still preserved in Mr. Jeffreys' cabinet, is well 

 delineated as the frontispiece to Pennant's fourth volume, ivhere 

 the incipient folds ("omitted in Donovan's representation) are cor- 

 rectly indicated. The last named author candidly avoived that his 

 drawing of M. despectus ivas taken from a Greenland example 

 (a sadly worn one still in existence in the same important col- 

 lection), hut mentio7is the remark of a friend, that he had seen 

 a shell like it a few miles off the Orkneys. Similarly the dupli- 

 catus, whose shape is more elongated than any specimen tve have 

 ever met with, is figured as a boreal species, to illustrate the 

 difference between it and carinatus. 



TROPHON. (Name) De Montfort. 



Shell rather strong, fusiform, spire produced, whorls 

 rough, with lamellar varices, their interstices often spirally 

 sulcated ; mouth produced below into a narrow canal ; no 

 teeth or plaits on pillar lip. Operculum corneous, ungui- 

 cular ; its nucleus terminal. 



Animal rather short from the size of the shell, its head 

 narrow, and bearing two sul)ulate tentacula, with unse- 

 parated bases ; the eyes placed on thickened connate 



