372 HAMINEA. 



ture rather wide, outer lip slightly arched, somewhat acuminately 

 produced above, expanded below, coluraella nearly straight, re- 

 flected, producing behind it a minute umbilicus. Length 3 lines, 

 breadth 1 * lines, alt. 1] lines (/>'.). 



f 'ape Grenville, Northeast Australia, 20 fathoms, sandy mud ; 

 Albany Passage, Cape York, North Australia, 11 fathoms, sandy 

 mud and broken shells. 



Haminea decora BRAZ., Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, ii, p. 83, 

 1877. 



May prove to belong to Atys, but as it is uufigured and not seen 

 by me, I do not venture to alter Mr. Brazier's generic reference. 



This species differs very much from Haminea ambigua (A. Ad- 

 ams), the center of the shell being smooth, and each end having 

 eight deep transverse engraved lines, whereas H. ambiyua is en- 

 tirely transversely striated. 



H. CUTICULIFERA Smith. PI. 41, fig. 13. 



Shell elongate-cylindrical, above and below roundly quadrate, 

 thin, white ; covered with a whitish epidermis, shining, buff tinged 

 toward base and vertex ; having growth lines, and above and at 

 base subdistantly transversely striated. Aperture rather wide, di- 

 lated at base, scarcely produced above the vertex ; columella short, 

 rather straight, reflexed, covering the umbilical region, joined with 

 the vertex by a very thin scarcely shining callus ; lip thin, inserted 

 in the middle of the vertex and thickened there. Alt. 14, diam. 

 6J mill. (N.). 



Port Jackson, 2-15 fms. (Coppinger, Challenger, Angas) ; Le- 

 vuka, Fiji, 12 fms. (Challenger) ; New Zealand. 



H. cuticulifera SMITH, Ann. Mag. N. H. (4), ix, p. 350, 1872 ; 

 Zool. Col. H. M. S. Alert/ p. 87, pi. 6, f. H. ANGAS, P. Z. S. 

 1877, p. 189. Cy/irhna cntirutifera Smith, WATSON, Chall. Gastr. 

 p. 663. 



The lateral outlines of this species are nearly straight ; the supe- 

 rior striae are about six in number, the inferior about eighteen. //. 

 papyrus A. Ad. is its nearest ally ; but it is narrower, more elon- 

 gate, with the strire not covering the whole of the shell, the vertex 

 is more depressed and the aperture is less broadly dilated and more 

 effused at the base (X). 



Tins species belongs to a group of forms somewhat similar to < 

 t:iin species of Cyl'u-hna and Ad/s, like //. decora Braz. and papyrus- 



