60 Rev. Canon Norman's Revision 



V. — Revision of British Mollusca. By the Kev. Canon 

 A. M. Norman, M.A., D.C.L., F.R.S., F.L.S., &c. 



[Continued from vol. v. p. 484.] 



Class II. GASTROPODA. 



Subclass I. ANISOPLEURA. 



Superorder I. EUTHYNEURA. 



Older I. PTEROPODA. 



Suborder I. GYMNOSOMATA. 



Fam. 1. Clionidae. 



Genus Clione, Phipps. 



21. Clione limacina^ Phipps. 



Clio limacina, Phipps, Voyage Nortli Pole (1773), p. 195. 



Clione borealis, Pallas, Spicilegia Zoologica, fasc. x. (1774), p. 28, pi. i. 



figs. 18, 19. 

 Clione limaciym, G. 0. Sars, Moll. Regiouis Arcticfe Norvegise, p. 322, 



pi. xxix. fig. 4 a-c. 



Mr. T. Scott (Report Fishery Board Scotland, 1889, 

 p. 325) has procured a specimen of this species in the towing- 

 net off Inchkeith in the Firth of Forth, which he kept alive 

 for two days ; and Professor M'Intosh records that on April 

 11 and 12, 1887, and during a week or two afterwards, a 

 considerable number of the species were captured near shore 

 at St. Andrews. 



Pelseneer (' Challenger ' Report) says, " There is in the 

 collection of the Museum d'tlistoire Naturelle of Paris a 

 specimen from Falmouth presented by Leach." Leach cer- 

 tainly procured it living off the coast of Mull in 1811 {vide 

 Forbes and Hanley, ' British Mollusca,' vol. iv. p. 292). 



It is the Clio rehisa of O. F. Miiller, Clione yaiiilionacea 

 of authors, Clio miquelonensis of Rang, Clione elegantissima 

 of Dall, and Clione Dalli of Krause. 



Very abundant in the Arctic seas. The British localities 

 are its most southern limit in the Eastern Atlantic, while in 

 the Western Atlantic it was found in 1833 as far south as 

 New York. It lias been taken in Finmark, but is not known 

 to reach the Norwegian coast. 



