RETUSA. 207 



pear-shaped below; lip visibly flexuous, inflected in the middle;: 

 columellar margin nearly straight. Columella a little thickened, 

 arcuate, without apparent fold. Color transparent white. Alt. 2'5, 

 diam. 1 mill. (B., D. & ZX). 

 Mediterranean and Adriatic Seas; Atlantic from Norway to the 



Canaries, laminarian zone. 



Bulla mammillata PHIL., Enam. Moll. Sicil. i, p. 122. pi. 7,f.20; 

 ii, p. 96. Cylichna mamillata FORBES & HANLEY, Hist. Brit. Moll, 

 iii, p. 514, pi. 114c, f. 4, 5. Utriculus mamillatus JEFFR., Brit. 

 Conch., iv, p. 420; v, p. 223, pi. 94, f. 1. Eetusa mamillata BUQ., 

 DAUTZ. & DOLLF., Moll. Rouss., p. 5,31, pi. 64, f. 18-20. Bulla 

 minuta MACGILL., teste Jeffr. 



Distinguished by the projecting apex and cylindrical form. 

 Except in lacking a columellar fold, this species resembles Torna- 

 tina. 



R. MARIEI Dautzenberg. PI. 24, figs. 34, 35, 36. 



Shell 1 mill, high, 2 mill, wide, minute, subsolid, convoluted, 

 cylindrical, longitudinally arcuately striated, truncate above, con- 

 tracted iu the middle, dilated toward the base. Whorls 3-4, the 

 penultimate obliquely projecting above the last. Suture little im- 

 pressed. Aperture as long as the shell, straight and a little thick 

 ened ; lip simple, sinuous, iriflexed in the middle, expanded ante- 

 riorly. Color milky, with a subhyaline zone at the middle (Dante.). 



/San Miguel, Azores. 



Tornatina mariei DAUTZ., Contrib. a la Faune Malac. des lies 

 A9ores, Res. Camp. Sci., Albert I, p. 21, pi. 1, figs. 3a-3d, 1889. 



This interesting species seems distinct from all others of European 

 seas, being well characterized by the formation of the summit. In 

 T. mamillata Phil., only the first whorl of the spire projects; in T. 

 mariei this whorl is impressed, and the next-to-the-last whorl is 

 prominent (DautzJ). 



R. OLIVIFORMIS Watson. PI. 25, fig. 50. 



This large and very interesting species is in too bad condition for 

 satisfactory description. I had called it Utriculus oliviformis from 

 its shape, which is peculiarly stumpy, with an excessively short and 

 broad mouth, and an unusually high and blunt spire; it is sharply 

 fretted all over with spiral lines, and has a strong, little furrow be- 

 hind the sharp-edged twisted pillar. It is like Utriculus culcitella 

 Gould, or Utriculus lactuca Nevill, in its conical spire, and like 



