302 



wound, the last large, globose, all separated by a deep suture and 

 an impressed serrulate line ; surface smooth, marked by stride and 

 obsolete waved furrows throughout its length ; aperture round, 

 lunate, broad, columellar margin incurved, slightly reflexed at 

 the base. 



" Major diam. 10, min. 7f- mm. 



" Animal blackish grey above, anterior lobes with black lines ; 

 sole of foot pale, often divided by a paler median zone." (T. 

 Canefri, in Latin.) 



Hab. Near Bhamo. 



[The next two species were included in Macroctilamys by 

 Blanford. I place them here because planiuscula certainly is more 

 likely to belong to the Helicidse. Until the animals are examined 

 it is impossible to know what their affinities are.] 



Depressed or conoidly depressed. 

 Longitudinally striated. 



Macrochlamys ? anonae, Godwin-Austen, Mol. Ind. i, 1883, p. 91, 



pi. 14, fig. 8 ; ii, 1898, p. 48. 



Shell openly perforate, subumbilicate. convexly depressed, rather 

 solid, finely striated longitudinally under the microscope, yellowish 

 brown ; spire convex, suture slightly impressed ; whorls 3^, 

 convex, the last rounded at the periphery and moderately convex 

 beneath ; aperture oblique, lunate ; peristome obtuse, columellar 

 margin oblique. 



Major diam. 11, height 0'6 mm. 



Hal. Calcutta ; found on custard-apples. 



The description is from the types in the British Museum 

 (Godwin- Austen collection). It is possible that they are 

 immature. 



Shells not exceeding about 6 millimetres (a quarter of an inch} 

 in diameter. (Generic affinities often doubtful.) 



Sul-globose or subturbinate. 

 Smooth. 



Macrochlaxnys ? planiuscula, Hutton (Helix), J. A. S. . vii, 1838, 

 p. 218 ; Pfr. (Helix) Man. Hel i, 1848, p. 60; H. $ T. (Helix) 

 C. I. 1876, pi. 32, figs. 7, 10 ; Godwin-Austen, Mol. Ind. i, 1883, 

 p. 88, pi. 16, fig. 7. 



Shell obtectly perforate, subglobosely depressed, smooth, without 

 sculpture of any kind, translucent, scarcely polished above, more 



