HYALINA. 403 



<fcc., and also in moist beds of leaves in forests. It is not rare in 

 Vermont, and Mr. Say originallv' found it in Georgia. Common to 

 the boreal regions of the three continents. It appears to inhabit all 

 of Eastern North America, having been found from Great Slave 

 Lake to Texas and Florida. Dr. Newconib catalogues it among the 

 species fonnd at Lake Tahoe, California. 



This is a very well-marked shell, not liable to be confounded with 

 any other species except H. labijrinthica^ which is of about the same 

 size and shape. But the coarsely wrinkled surface of the one, and 

 the polished, highly reflecting surface of the other, are distinctions 

 which strike the eye at once ; if anything further is needed, the par- 

 allel ridges within the mouth of H. labijrintJiica will put the ques- 

 tion beyond a doubt. When viewed from above, its numerous, nar- 

 row, accurately adjusted volutions render it a very beautiful object. 



Hyalina minutissinia. 



Shell snb-crlohose, reddish horn color, shining; whorls four, convex; aperture 

 sub-circular ; peristome simple ; umbilicated. 



Helix minutissima, Lea, Tr. Am. Phil. See. ix. 17 ; Proc. ii. 82 (1841) ; Obs. iv. 17 (1844). 



— Trosciiel, Ar. f. Nat. 1843, 124. — Pkeiffeu, Mon. Ilel. Viv. i. 87. — W. G. 



BiNNEY, Terr. Moll. iv. 100, pi. 77, figs. 6, 7. — Morse, Am. Nat. i. 546, fig. 45 



(1867). 

 Helix mijuiscula, teste Binnet, Terr. Moll. ii. 221. 



Punctum mimitissiinum, Morse, Journ. Portl. Soc. i. 27, figs. 69, 70; pi. 8, fig. 71 (1864). 

 Conulus mimUissima, Tryon, Am. Journ. Conch, ii. 257, pi. 4, fig. 63 (1866). 



Shell umbilicated, sub-globose, reddish horn color, shining, 

 marked with strong transverse striae and microscopic 

 revolving lines, both most prominent near the umbili- ^'"' ^''■^' 

 cus ; whorls four, convex, gradually increasing, the e 



last broadly umbilicated ; aperture sub-circular, ob- ~~"^^ 



* H. 7nnuitis^iina. 



lique ; peristome simple, acute, its columellar extrem- 

 ity sub-reflected. Greater diameter one and a half mill. ; height, 

 one millimetre. 



Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio. 



Jaw* composed of sixteen long, slender corneous lamince, re- 

 curved at their cutting edges, these plates partially lapping over 

 each other. 



Lingual membrane with fifty-one arched rows of 13-1-13 



* The character of the jaw would place the species in the sub-family Orthalicino'., as a 

 distinct genus, for which Mr. Morse's name Punctum might be retained, otherwise the 

 species would be placed in Hi/alina. 



