1592 



TRANSACTIONS OF WAGNER 



TERTIARY FAUNA OF FLORIDA 



Phacoides var. Whitfieldi Ball. 

 Phacoides plesiolophus Dall. 

 Phacoides piluliformis Dall, M. 

 Divaricella chipolana Dall, C, B. 

 Diplodonta alta Dall, C, S. 

 Diplodonta radiata Dall. 

 Diplodonta nucleiformis Wagner. 

 Sportella obolus Dall. 

 Sportella unicarinata Dall. 

 Sportella lubrica Dall. 

 Sportella lioconcha Dall. 

 Sportella Whitfieldi Dall. 

 Erycina fabulina Dall. 

 Erycina curtidens Dall. 

 Bornia dodona Dall. 

 Bornia floridana Dall. 

 Montacuta actinophora Dall. 

 Aligena pustulosa Dall, C. 

 Aligena lineata Dall. 

 Cardium ctenolium Dall. 

 Cardium delphicum Dall, S. 

 Cardium malacum Dall. 

 Cardium pansatrum Dall. 

 Cardium druidicum Dall. 

 Cardium taphrium Dall, S?. 

 Cardium apateticum Dall, M. 

 Laevicardium compressum Dall. 

 Dosinia liogona Dall. 



dementia Grayi Dall. 

 Transennella santarosana Dall. 

 Gouldia alta Dall. 

 *Macrocallista maculata Linne, C. 

 Callocardia Sayana Conrad. 

 Lirophora glyptocyma Dall. 

 Chamelea rhodia Dall, S. 

 Tellina hypolispa Dall, C. 

 Tellina dodona Dall. 

 Tellina roburina Dall. 

 Tellina nucinella Dall. 

 Angulus agria Dall. 

 Angulus acalypta Dall, C. 

 Macoma lenis Dall. 

 Semele chipolana Dall, C. 

 Semele var. compacta Dall. 

 Semelina striulata Dall. 

 Solen amphistemma Dall. 

 Mactra cymata Dall. 

 Spisula dodona Dall. 

 Spisula densa Dall. 

 Ervilia planata Dall. 

 Corbula Whitfieldi Dall, M. 

 Corbula heterogenea Guppy, C, B. 

 Bothrocorbula radiatula Dall. 

 Bothrocorbula var. tenella Dall. 

 Panopea Whitfieldi Dall, C, S. 

 Gastrochsena ligula H. C. Lea. 



THE MIOCENE FAUNA OF SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY, 

 ESPECIALLY THE MARLS OF SHILOH. 



These marls contain a fauna which has been enumerated by Heilprin and 

 monographed by Whitfield. The present writer sent Mr. Frank Burns to make 

 an exhaustive collection at the different exposures, and later himself visited 

 the deposits at Shiloh for stratigraphical study. A summary of the observa- 

 tions made on this occasion, with sections, is contained in Bulletin 84, United 

 States Geological Survey, pp. 39-42. The most important observation made on 

 this occasion was that the surface and upper portion of the " shell marl" from 

 which the fossils were obtained is very irregularly hummocky, with lower 



