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THE VICTORIAN NATURALIST. 



Chaviidce. 

 1. Chamostrea albida. 



Crassatellidce. 

 1. Crassatella Kingicola. 

 Mactridce. 

 . Mactra x:olita. 



Pholadidce. 

 Barnea australasite. 



B. similis. 



Myacidce. 

 Panopjea australis. 

 Solenidce. 

 1. Solen vaginoides. 



Soleinyidce. 

 1. Solemya australis. 



Petricolidce. 

 1. Venerupis carditoides. 



Tellinidce. 

 1. Sanguinolaria vitrea. 

 1. Soletellina biradiata. 

 Tellina albinella. 

 T. decussata. 



Veneridce. 

 1. Chione gallinula. 



C. lamellata. 

 1. C. strigosa. 

 1. C. undulosa. 



1. Cytherea Diemenensis. 

 1. Tapes fabagella. 

 1. T. galactites. 



Order — Asiphonida. 



Family — Aviculidoi. 



1. Avicula Georgiana. 

 1. Vulsella ovata. 



Arcidcc, 

 1. Barbatia laminata. 



Arcidcc. 

 1. B. radula. 



B. trapezium. 

 1. Limopsis Bassii. 

 1'. L. rubricata.* 



Limidcc. 

 1. Lima bullata. 



Mytilida. 

 1. Modiola albieosta. 

 1. M. australis. 

 1. M. semivestita. 

 1. Modiolaria Cumingiana. 

 1. Mytilus Menkeanus. 

 Ostreidce, 

 1. Ostrea Angasi. 

 0. auriculata. 



Pinnidce. 

 1. Pinna tasmanica. 



Pectinidce. 

 1. Pecten asperrimus. 

 1. P. fumatus. 

 1. P. Actinos. 

 1. P. undulatus. 



Nuculidte. 

 Leda crassa. 



Spondylidce. 

 Spondylus tenellus. 



Trigoniadcc, 

 1, Trigonia margaritacea. 



CLASS— BEACHIOPODA. 



Oede r — Arthropomata. 



Family — Terehratulida. 



1. Megerlia Willemoesii. 

 1. Terebratulina cancellata. 

 1. Waldheimia fiavescens. 



A NEW VICTORIAN STARFISH. 



The following letter has been lately received by one of our 

 members, Mr. J. Bracebridge Wilson, of Geelong, from Prof. 

 F. Jeffrey Bell, of the British Museum of Natural History, and 

 may be of interest to some of our readers : — 



British Museum (Natural History), 



Cromwell-road, London, S.W., 



30th September, 18S7. 



Dear Sir, — Among the valuable specimens which you have 

 been so kind as to send to the British Museum are two 

 examples of a starfish — a true Asterias — with the suckers in 

 apparent four, not two, rows, which has no spinous processes 



* Described as a new species by Prof essor Tate in the S.A. Royal Society's Transactions, 

 October, 1886. 



