ELASMIAS. 125 



tund-lunar, colored like the outside, provided with an incon- 

 spicuous entering parietal lamella. Peristome simple, the 

 columellar margin provided with a strong whitish fold, basal 

 and outer margins acute. Length 2y 2 , diam. 2 mm. (Crosse). 



New Caledonia: Baie du Sud (E. Marie). 



Tornatellina mariei CROSSE, Journ. de Conchyl., xxii, 1874, 

 pp. 109, 393, pi. 12, f . 7 ; xlii, 1894, p. 306. GASSIES, Faune 

 Conch. N. Caled., iii, in Actes Soc. Linn. Bord., 1880, p. 48, 

 pi. 2, f. 22. PFR., Monogr., viii, p. 319. 



"This species is shorter and especially more swollen than 

 T. noumeensis ; it is also thinner and has a better developed 

 columellar fold" (Crosse). 



Crosse's figure, copied in our fig. 11, is not very good. A 

 specimen received from E. Marie is drawn in fig. 12, length 

 2.4 mm. It is closely related to E. wakefieldice (Cox), but 

 probably distinct by its more elevated spire. Extremely fine 

 spiral striation may be seen on the last whorl. 



Species of the Philippines, East Indies and Islands of the 

 Indian Ocean. 



8. E. MANILENSE (Dohrn). 



Shell ovate-conic, thin, smooth, pellucid, corneous. Spire 

 conic, rather obtuse. Whorls 5, convex, the last scarcely two- 

 thirds the length of the spire. Aperture oblong-semioval. 

 Parietal lamella median, compressed, the crest curved later- 

 ally. Columella oblique, white-callused, slightly truncate. 

 Peristome acute, unexpanded. Length 4.5, diam. 3, length of 

 aperture 2 mm. (Dohrn). 



Philippine Is.: Manila, Luzon, Ubay, Bohol (Dr. C. Sem- 

 per). Maldive Group: Hulule, North Male Atoll (Gardiner). 

 Natuna Is.: Bunguran (A. Everett). 



Tornatellina manilense DOHRN, Malakozoologischer Blatter, 

 x, 1863, p. 160. PFEIFFER, Monographia, vi, p. 364. SEM- 

 PER, Reisen im Archip. Philippinen, Landmoll., pp. 133, 140, 

 pi. 16, f. 13 (teeth). E. A. SMITH, in Gardiner's Fauna and 

 Geography of the Maldive and Laccadive Archipelagoes, i, pt. 

 2, 1902, p. 144. 



From the two most nearly related species, ovata and cernica, 



