Tin; ANXAKS 



AND 



MAGAZINE OF NATURAL mSTORy, 



[SEVEXTU .SKltlRS.] 



" p«"r litorn ^pnruite mancutn, 



Nnindi-s, ft circiim vitreoa oonsiditv fontt-s : 

 Volliot- virtrinco tcniToa h'lc cariiiti' flores: 

 Florilmn ft pictiim. diva:, r.-pli-te canixtriim. 

 At vo», o XyniphiB Cr.iffridi'S, iti- sub umLis ; 

 Itf. riTUrvnto vnriiitii i-onilliii tninco 

 Vi-llit<' miis<-oHis i- niiiilmg, i-t mihi conchoa 

 Fertf, Dea> pola^i, et pint;tii conc-hylia diicco." 



N.PartkeniiGuiHneHiui, Ed. I. 



No. 79. JULY 1904. 



I. — Naturaf History Xotcs from H.M. ladiaa Mariiw Survcij 

 Steamer ' Invest i(/utor,' Commander T. H. Hemiii//, H.M. — 

 Series III., No. 1. On Mollnsca from the Bay of Henijal 

 and the Arabian Sea. By Edgar A. Smith, I.^.O. 



[Concluded from vol. xiii. p. 473.] 



Capulus lissus, Smith. 



Cajml'is //wM.«, Smith, Ann. it Mag-. Nat. Hist. 1891, vol. xiv. p. 10(5, 

 pi. iv. tig-f. 4-(J. 



Hub. stations 233, 23G, 237, and 210, off Andcimans, 90- 

 303 lath.; off Tiavancorc coast, 300 fath. 



Aery firqncntly youuj.^ sj)cciincns arc found adl»erin<]; to 

 older e.vamplcs. Tiic shape is variable and the outline of 

 the aperture often very irregular, the irrcgidarity being 

 occasioned by tlie diHercnt surfaces to which the specimens 

 have been attached. The general cap-shaped form is, how- 

 ever, persistent. 



Ctijiulus fraijilis, sp. n. 



Tt'.><t.i tonuis, (Icprosao pilciforniis, poUiicido-alhida, p«^rin>ti-aro f»Miiii 

 tlavescfiitc iiidiita, liiiei."* iiu rfnu'nti tenuissiiiiiij Hcnlpta, iutus 



.1"'. it- Maj. S. Ili<t. S.-r. 7. Vol. xiv. 1 



