PUPA. 



435 



Fig. 694. 



posite the large tooth, ahnost as large and inclined to the left also, 

 is a quadraiiguhir bhnit tooth, nure slightly curved ; on the left 

 margin are tln-ee teeth, of which the upper one is largest, and about 

 half the size of the basal tooth, of a blunt quadrangular figure ; the 

 other two are minute ; on the outer lip are also three 

 teeth, of which the two upper are very small and 

 pyramidal ; umbilicus open. Length, one fifteenth 

 of an inch ; l)rcadth, one fourth of an inch. 



This minute species I first found under a loose 

 stone on the ledges at Phillips's Point, Lynn, near 

 the Ocean House. It was somewhat broken, so as to 

 give an excellent view of the teeth. Since then I have 

 met with it not nnfreqnently in damp places, under 

 leaves and boards, in company with P. modesta. 



From Georgia and Mississippi to the British Pos- 

 sessions. 



The shell goes on regularly narrowing both downwards and up- 

 wards from the middle of the lower whorl. Four of the teeth are 

 very small, and would scarcely be discerned without being higldy 

 magnified, and they seem to be seated farther within the aperture ; 

 the small one on the transverse lip, the basal one, and the upper 

 one on the right lip are liable to be wanting. 



le^WioiP.pentodon,. 



Pupa decora. 



Shell cylindrical, tliin, translucent, striated ; whorls five or six, rounded ; aper- 

 ture nearly round or semi-oval, with four denticles; peristome slightly reflexed; 

 perforated. 



Pupa decnrn, HorLD, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist. ii. 263 (Dec. 1S47), with a woodcut; in 

 Terr. Mod. ii. .327, pi. 71, fig. 2. — Pfeiffeu, Mon. liel. Viv. iii. 553. — W. G. 

 BiNXEY, Terr. Moll. iv. 143. 



Shell minute, cylindrical, rounded at apex, thin, sinn- 

 ing, translucent, of a wine-yellow color, regularly striated 

 hy lines of growth ; spire of five or six closely revolving, 

 rounded whorls, deeply separated at the sutures ; aper- 

 ture nearly round or semi-oval, obliquely limited by the 

 penultimate wdiorl, armed with four slender denticles, the 

 largest of tliem on the parietal wall, one on the columcl- 

 lar portion of the peristome, and two on the outer poi'tion, 

 all disposed so as to form the arms of a cross ; the peristome is 

 slightly reflexed, and indented opposite the base of the two labial 



p. flecnra. 

 Enlarjred. 



