22 THE NAUTILUS. 
The type has been in my collection for about 20 years ; it is very 
perfect. A similar, but partially broken example, is in my father’s 
hands. I never saw others. 
NOTICES OF NEW SPECIES AND VARIETIES OF AMERICAN LAND 
SHELLS. 
BY HENRY A. PILSBRY. 
The following forms were included by name in the recently pub- 
lished catalogue of American Land Shells, but have not hitherto 
been described. 
Epiphragmophora arrosa var. expansilabris n. vy. 
Compact and globose-turbinate, imperforate or nearly so, wrinkle 
striate, malleated in places; band above periphery broad and dark; 
spire conic, whorls 52; lip very broadly expanded, reflexed below, 
_ thickened within, white. Alt. 19-20, diam. 23-25 mm. 
Near Eureka, Humboldt Co., California. The specimens de- 
scribed were received from Mr. Fred L. Button. The band is some- 
times wanting. 
Epiphragmophora tudiculata var. umbilicata n. v. 
Shell smoothish, the malleation weak or subobsolete; umbilicus 
widely open. Alt. 163, diam. 27, width of umbilicus 3 mm., or 
smaller with similar proportions. 
San Luis Obispo Co., California. Types were presented to the 
Academy by Mr. John Ford. 
Polygyra lawe var. tallulahensis n. var. 
Very small, shaped like P. jejwna Say, the peristome expanded, 
subreflexed, thickened within, no teeth or Jamelle; umbilicus 
minute. Whorls 43, the last with a slight ridge or crest and then 
a wide groove behind the peristome, slightly descending in front. 
Surface nearly lusterless, with faint growth lines and sparse, sub- 
obsolete spiral striez. Alt. 33, diam. 53 mm. 
Tallulah Falls, Georgia. 
This is apparently the toothless form mentioned in Man. Amer. 
Land Shells, p. 317. 
Polygyra tridentata var. complanata n. var. 
Shell large, depressed and glossy, with weak striation ; whorls 6, 
umbilicus rapidly expanding in the last whorl, between } and + the 
