166 PALEONTOLOGY OF NEW JERSEY. 
lower third of the shell’s length, giving it a subconical or truncato-conical 
outline, very readily distinguished in comparison with the form of this 
species. 
Formation and locality: tn the blackish green marls of the Lower Marl 
Bed, at Crosswick’s Creek, New Jersey; collection at Rutgers College, col- 
lected by Dr. N. L. Britton; and also from the collection Acad. Nat. Sci., 
Phila., but without any indications of locality other than ‘“ Cret. N. J.” 
Class SCAPHOPODA. 
DENTALIID A. 
Genus DENTALIUM Linneus. 
DENTALIUM SUBARCUATUM. 
Plate xx, Figs 19-24. 
Dentalium subarcuatum Conrad: Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 2d ser., vol. 2, Pl. 
xxiv, Fig. 13; Gabb, Synopsis, p. 49; Meek, Check List Cret. and Jur. 
Foss., p. 17; Geol. N. J., Newark, 1868, p. 728. 
Shell small, and as seen in casts, the usual condition in which it is 
found, slender and round, very gradually tapering and very gently arcuate 
throughout its length. A specimen 1 inch long measures only one line in 
diameter at the larger end, and less than half that at the smaller end. Along 
the dorsal line of the cast there is a rounded elevated ridge, with a flat- 
tened area on each side of it, traversing the entire length, and also in some 
cases a depressed line a little distance from the ventral center on each side, 
and more seldom other depressed longitudinal lines between these and the 
dorsal line. On still other* casts the dorsal line or ridge is only faintly 
marked, and all others obsolete, leaving the cast comparatively smooth. 
On a specimen which preserves the substance and shows the surface strue- 
ture about the same proportions or rate of increase is shown, allowing for 
its partially compressed condition. On the posterior two-thirds of the 
length the surface is longitudinally lined with sharp distinct ridges, with 
broad flattened interspaces. Seven of the ridges can be seen on one side of 
the specimen, as it lies in the marl, indicating the existence of twelve or 
