1895.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 55 



Aldrich and Meyer as "T. divisura Con., var." They give as 

 localities, Claiborne and Lisbon, Ala. ; Wautubbee and Newton, 

 Miss.; Wheelock, Tex. 



Geological horizon. Lower Claiborne Eocene. 



Type. Texas State Museum. 



Terebra houstonia nov. sp. PL 3, fig. 11, and PL 4, fig. 1. 



T. polygyra Heilp. (non Con.), Coll. U. S. Nat. Mas. 



T. vetusta Heilp. (non Lea), Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1890, p. 398. 



? T. vetusta Gregorio, Mon. Faun. Eoc. de PAla., pi. 1, figs. 40, 41. 



Specific characterization. Size and general form as indicated in 

 the figure; whorls 12 or 13, longitudinally ribbed, the ribbing being 

 much coarser in the upper part of the shell than in the lower; suture 

 margined below by an obscurely impressed revolving line; columella 

 straight, smooth, tapering rapidly. 



This species is characterized at once by the height of its whorls in 

 comparison to their respective diameters, the bulging sides of the 

 whorls, the irregularities of the ribbing, and the straight, smooth 

 columella. 



Localities. Smithville, Bastrop Co. ; near McBee's school-house, 

 Cherokee Co. ; Little Brazos River, near iron bridge, on Mos- 

 ley's Ferry road; Cedar Creek, Wheelock League, Robertson Co.; 

 Elm Creek, Lee Co. ; near Crockett and 2 miles west of Crockett f 

 Houston Co. ; Collard's farm, Sparks' Headright, Brazos Co. ; 

 Arnold's Ranch, Frio Co.; southeast of Campbellton, just south of 

 Lipan Creek, Atascosa Co. Also in Claiborne, Webb, and Bien- 

 ville Parishes, La.; 2 miles east of Newton, Miss.; Claiborue, Ala.; 

 '2 miles west of Orangeburg, S. C. 



Geological horizon. Lower Claiborue Eocene. 



Type. Texas State Museum. 



Genus CONUS. 

 Conus smithvilicnsis nov. sp. PL 4, fig. 2. 



Specific characterization. General form as figured; whorls about 

 1*2: smaller spiral whorls costate or crenulate; penultimate whorl 

 smooth; body whorl smooth, except about 12 revolving lines at base. 



This species bears much resemblance to the figure given in Proc. 

 Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1879, pi. 13, fig. 8, of "Conus" pukher- 

 ri in us Heilp., but upon examining the type of this species now in the 

 Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., N. Y. City, it was found to be, as already 



