CERITHIID.E. 113 



Central tooth of the radula multicuspidate, lateral securiform, 

 the margin toothed, marginals narrow, with comb-like extremities 

 (PL 19, fig. 1). 



Marine, inhabiting temperate and tropical seas ; fossil, nearly 500 

 species are enumerated, commencing in the Trias and attaining it? 

 maximum development in the Cretaceous. 



Subgenus CERITHIUM (sensu stricto). 



Columella thickened, with a tooth-like posterior tubercle, outer 

 lip dilated at the base, whorls varicose. 



Section COLIXA, H. and A. Adams, 1853. 



Shell elongated, whorls numerous, convex, nodulous, spirally 

 striated, aperture oval, prolonged in front into a short recurved 

 canal, columella simple, oblique, outer lip expanded and reflexed. 

 Middle whorls gibbous, sculpture usually obsolete on the last whorl. 



The few species inhabit deep water, sandy bottom, at the Philip- 

 pines, China, etc. 



Section LIOCERITHIUM, Tryon, 1887. 



Shell pupoidal or subcylinclrical, without ribs or nodules, usually 

 spirally grooved. C. INCISUM, Sowb. 



Subgenus STILUS, Jeffreys, 1885. 



Shell spit-shaped, reticulated ; apex forming a twisted and 

 abruptly semi-detached peak ; basal groove short and recurved. S. 

 INSIGNIS, Jeffreys. 



Subgenus CERITHIODERMA, Conrad, 1860. 



Acutely ovate, striate ; lip grooved, umbilicated, columella 

 recurved inferiorly or subtruncate ; aperture patulous, margin 

 obtusely rounded inferiorly ; beak very short, narrow, recurved. 



Fossil only. C. PRIMA, Conr. Eocene, Alabama (Struct, and 

 Syst. Conch., t. 69, f. 51). 



? Subgenus BRACHYTREMA, Morris and Lycett, 1850. 



Shell turreted, turbinate, solid, whorls nodose, costulate or can- 

 cellate, the last whorl large, ventricose, angulated ; columella 

 smooth, rounded, obliquely truncate at the base forming a short 

 oblique canal, aperture obsoletely channeled above, lip thickened 

 and usually exteriorly subvaricose. C. WRIGHTI, Cotteau (PL 19, 

 fig. 8), 16 sp., Jurassic, Europe. 



