256 MOLLUSCA FROM THE CRAG. 



Locality. Red Crag, Sutton. 



Clyde Beds, and Irish Drift. 



Recent, Mediterranean, Britain. 



This shell, I believe, has not been met with in the Coralline Crag : in the Red 

 Crag it is not by any means abundant, and always in a fragmentary state. In my best- 

 preserved specimen, the anterior termination is rather more rounded than that of 

 the recent species to which it is assigned, but I have not enough to say if such be a 

 constant character.* 



3. SOLEN ENSIS, Linnaeus. Tab. XXV, fig. 6, af. 



SOLEN ENSIS. Linn. Syst. Nat., ed. 12, p. 1114, No. 35, 1767. 



Poli. Test. Sicil., vol. i, p. 18, t. 11, fig. 14, 1791. 



Broc. Conch. Foss. Subap., p. 479, 1814. 



Gould. Invert. Massach., p. 29, 1841. 



Desk. Exp. Sclent. Alger., p. 184, pi. 11, figs. 1 4. 

 _ _ Nyst. Coq. Foss. Belg., p. 44, pi. 1, fig. 4, a, b, 1844. 



Lovtn. Ind. Moll. Scand., p. 49, 1846. 



_ _ ? Grateloup. Cat. Zool. Invert. Gironde, p. 68, No. 819, 1838. 



Sismonda. Syn. Fed. Foss. Invert., p. 23, 1847. 



_ _ Forb. and Hani. Hist. Brit. Moll., vol. i, p. 250, pi. 14, fig. 2, 1848. 



CUBVUS. List. Hist. Conch., t. 311, fig. 257. 



ENSIFOEMTS. S. Wood. Catalogue, 1840. 



J. Sowerby. Min. Conch., t. 642, fig. 1. 



? Conrad. Foss. Med. Tert., p. 76, pi. 43, fig. 8, 1845. 



HAUSMANNI ? Gold/. Pet. Germ., vol. ii, p. 277, pi. 159, fig. 6, a c, 1842. 



Spec. Char. Testa lineari, arcuatd, extremitate anticd curvatd, non marginatd; in 

 valvd sinistrd unidentato , in alter d bidentato. 



Shell linear, curved, anterior extremity rounded, hot marginated ; one cardinal 

 tooth in the left valve, and two in the right. 



Length, 3 inches. Height, \ inch. 



Locality. Cor. Crag, Sutton, Ramsholt, Sudbourn. 

 Red Crag, Sutton, Walton Naze. 

 Irish Drift (Forbes}. 

 Recent, N. E. Coast of America, Brit. Seas, Mediterranean, Sea of Okhotsk (Middendorf}. 



This species first appears in the Coralline Crag, where it is not very abundant ; 



* Since the above was written, I have obtained an imperfect specimen (fig. 7, a, b) of what appears to 

 belong to this species, judging from its linear character, in which the muscular impressions are, like those 

 of S. gladiolus, at a greater distance from the anterior margin, and which I first imagined to be a tangible 

 distinction. I now believe the two may be specifically united. 



