THE NAUTILUS. 71 



There are many other interesting notes bearing on nomencla- 

 ture, and the animals of Australian species. Six new species 

 are described and twenty-nine species figured. — C. W. J. 



An Annotated List of Shells from Northern Michigan. 

 By Mina L. Winslow (Occasional papers, Mus. Zool., Univ. 

 Mich., No. 42, July 1, 1917) a list of sixty-five species from 

 Schoolcraft, Alger and Chippewa counties, also a list from Isle 

 Royale. 



NOTES. 



The Oldroyd Collection. — Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Oldroyd have 

 given their collection of shells to the Leland Stanford Jr. 

 University, and are now permanently employed in the Museum, 

 Mrs. Oldroyd being the curator. The collection has been placed 

 in the Department of Geology and Mining. The Stanford alumni 

 purchased the collection and library of the late Henry Hemp- 

 hill, which, with the Law collection and several others, forms an 

 unusually fine working series. Mr. and Mrs. Oldroyd have spent 

 about eight weeks at Friday Harbor, Puget Sound and British 

 Columbia making large collections for the Stanford University, 

 California Academy of Science and University of California. 



North Carolina Land Shells. — The following species of 

 land shells were picked from leaf-mold collected at Spruce Pine, 

 Mitchell Co., North Carolina, by Samuel G. Gordon while on a 

 mineralogical excursion. The specimens are in the collection 

 of the Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., Gastrocopta contrada Say, O. 

 pentodon Say, Circmaria concava Say, Polita indentata Say, Tax- 

 eodonta lamellidens Pils. , Gastrodonta elliotti Redf. , G. gidaris 

 Say, Euconulus sterkii Dall. , Punctuvi pygmceum Drap. , Carychium 

 exile Lea. — E. G. Vanatta. 



A Correction. — In my little paper, "Descriptions of New 

 West American Marine Mollusks and Notes on Previously 

 Described Forms," Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., Vol. 52, pp. 670- 

 671, plate 46, figure 2, 1917, I published Cerithiopsis {Cerithiop- 



