MUSEUM OF COMPARATIVE ZOOLOGY. 193 
well as of the basal part of the shell. And among the whole number I found not 
one intermediate or doubtful specimen. There is no doubt but that we have to 
consider them as being specifically distinct, the more so since they live together in 
the same locality. For the new species I would propose the name P. Hemphilli, in 
honor of the man to whom we owe so many valuable additions to our malaco- 
logical fauna. 
As in shape and general appearance the two species are almost alike, it may be 
the best way to characterize the one in question by comparing it with P. calamitosa, 
Pilsb. P. Hemphilli averages a trifle larger than its companion, but either is some- 
what variable in size. While calamitosa has a 
minute perforation, Hemphilli is umbilicated in 
quite a peculiar way. ‘There is a nodule-like pro- Ba 
jection on the umbilical part of the last whorl, 
producing a rima beside the umbilicus ; in calam- 
itosa there is nothing of this formation. On the 
other hand, the latter has a small but distinct 
groove-like impression just at the base, near the . 
aperture appearing as a slight projection inside. % 
This feature is wanting in Hemphilli, Lamellæ : 
in the latter species, when looking from front, only one is generally seen in the 
palatal wall, corresponding to the superior one in calamitosa, but longer; i.e. be- 
ginning deeper in the throat, and fairly seen on the outside; also marked there by 
a corresponding impression, ascending in a curve from near the base. A little dis- 
tant from its inner end, just above the projection mentioned, there is another 
lamella beginning, directed toward the base and ending there, also seen on the 
outside. Quite generally there is a very small, thin, but well formed lamella in 
the palatal wall, near the projecting auricle. The columellar fold is quite short 
and small in Hemphilli, yet consisting of a vertical and a horizontal part. The 
(main) apertural lamella is decidedly longer in our species, and the supra- 
apertural higher and entire, while in calamitosa it is evidently composed of two 
parts marked by an indentation in the middle, or even entirely separated, in quite 
mature specimens. 
About twenty examples, collected at San Diego, Cal., by Mr. Hemphill, are all 
P. Hemphilli, no calamitosa among them. They are little different from the San 
Tomas River specimens, except by a somewhat shorter palatal lamella. 
The above is Sterki’s description (The Nautilus, July, 1870, Vol. IV. p. 27). 
My figure was drawn by him from the type. 
Pupa hordeacella, PILSBRY. 
Plate II, Fig. 2. 
The shell is of a long-ovoid shape, smaller and slenderer than P. servilis, Gould, 
translucent, waxen white, finely striate; the aperture is rounded, with a thin, ex- 
panded peristome. Within, there is, on the parietal wall, an entering fold arising 
near the termination of the outer lip, its edge a trifle sinuous or nearly straight; 
the columella has a fold about in the middle. There is a tiny deep-seated fold on 
VOL. XXII. — NO. 4, 13 
