8 PHILINE. 



Philine vitrea OLD., Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H., vii, p. 139, (Oct. 

 1859); Otia Conch., p. 111. 



P. ORIENTALIS A. Adams. PI. 2, fig. 16. 



Shell ovate-rounded, subinvolute, white, solid, shining ; no spire; 

 aperture large, spreading in front ; lip semicircular, the upper 

 angle produced and rounded. (Ad.). 



This species has somewhat the form of P. aperta, but wants the 

 transverse impressed groove seen in that species ; the plates of the 

 gizzard, moreover, are produced at each end into long, slender pro- 

 cesses, somewhat similar to those of P. schrceteri, the shell of which 

 is very different in form. (Ad.). 



Lat. 6 54' N., long. 122 18' E. Of Malanipa, Basilan Strait, 

 Philippines, 10-20. fms. (Challenger). 



P. oriental-is A. AD., P. Z. S., 1854, p. 672. SOWB. in Conch. 

 Icon., xviii, pi. 2, f. 11. WATSON, Chall. Gastr., p. 672. 



P. ANGASI Crosse & Fischer. PI. 3, figs. 59 (type), 57, 58. 



Shell oblong, longitudinally very delicately wrinkle-striate, thin, 

 pellucid, shining, hyaline-milky ; apex rounded, a little concave in 

 the middle ; convex outside, subcylindrical, spirally convoluted 

 within. Aperture very ample at base, the outer margin semicircu- 

 lar, simple, acute, extending some above the apex. Interior covered 

 with a white, pellucid, very thin callus in adults. Alt. 30, diam. 20 

 mill. Stomach plates very solid, looking like a cocked hat. (C. & 

 F.). 



St. Vincent's Gulf and Port Jackson (Angas) ; Torres Strait (Bra- 

 zier) ; New Zealand (Hutton). 



Bullcea angasi C. & F., Journ. de Conch., 1865, p. 38, pi. 2, f. 8. 

 Philine angasi ANGAS, P. Z. S., 1865, p. 189 ; 1867, p. 227. 

 BRAZIER, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, ii, p. 88. Sows, in Conch. 

 Icon., xviii, pi. 1, f. 4. WATSON, Chall. Gastrop., p. 671. HUT- 

 TON, Journ. de Conch., 1878, p. 41. 



This species has repeatedly been declared identical with P. aperta, 

 but it seems to have the lip less angular above than usual in that 

 species, and the stomach-plates are probably different, judging from 

 the brief remark of C. & F. to the effect that they are very solid 

 "et affectent 1'apparence d'un chapeau a cornes." One would 

 hardly say this of the plates of P. aperta (pi. 9, f. 1, 2, 3, 6, 7). At 



