78 PALEONTOLOGY OF NEW JERSEY. 
Formation and locality: All the specimens of the species yet observed 
are from the dark green layers of the Lower Green Marls at Crosswicks, 
New Jersey, and were collected by Dr. N. L. Britton for the State survey. 
Genus EUTHRIA Gray. 
EUTHRIA ? FRAGILIS, n. Sp. 
Plate 1x, Figs. 11, 12. 
Shell small, measuring only about three-fourths of an inch in length; 
form short fusiform, the point of greatest diameter beg nearly midway of 
the length; spire short, the apical ‘angle, taken from a crushed example, 
being about 70°, probably not more than 60° to 65° 
in perfect speci- 
mens; volutions ventricose, six or seven in number, the last one forming 
the great bulk of the shell and with the anterior beak forming about five- 
sevenths of the entire length when measured on the back of the volution; 
upper volutions compact; sutures strongly marked; anterior beak short, 
moderately strong; aperture not seen; substance of the shell very thin and 
fragile, marked only by fine lines of growth parallel to the margin of the 
aperture, which indicates the existence of a broad and rather marked sinus 
in the lip on the upper side of the volution, formed by the extension of the 
lip below and on the body of the volution far in advance of the margin at 
and just below the suture; on the sarface of the beak the strix gently 
inclined backward again. 
This species is well marked in its characters as compared with other 
New Jersey cretaceous shells, so that there will be no difficulty in recog- 
nizing it. Mr. Gabb describes a somewhat similar form from the Ripley 
group in Hardeman County, Tennessee, under the name Neptunea impressa, 
but the spire is somewhat shorter, and he describes the shell as marked by 
impressed spival lines which do not exist on this shell. He furthermore 
states that the columellar lip is covered by’ ‘‘a somewhat heavy layer of 
enamel.” This one may have possessed such a feature, but the condition 
of the specimens will not permit of an examination of that part, but no 
such appearance exists so far as can be seen. There may be some question 
1 Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 2d ser., vol. 4, p. 390, 
