288 RECORDS OF THE AUSTRALIAN MUSEUM. 
LIENARDIA GRACILIS sp. mov. 
(Plate xlviii., fig. 93.) 
Shell solid, elongate-ovate. Colour pale buff, with a few ferruginous 
streaks on the varix. Whorls six. Sculpture:—Fasciole area indeter- 
minate; ribs narrow, elevated half the width of their interstices, running 
undiminished from suture to base, discontinuous from whorl to whorl, 
nine on the penultimate and eight on the last whorl; the spirals are fine 
cords that lace the interstices and bead the ribs, four on the penultimate 
and nine on the last whorl; within the meshes of the major sculpture run 
fine close filaments. Aperture:—Varix broad and prominent, denticulate 
on the inner margin by three teeth which decrease in descending order ; 
sinus narrow aud shallow; canal short and open. length 4:5 mm., 
breadth 2 mm. 
Hab. Queensland:— Barney Point, Port Curtis (type, Dr. H. L. 
Kesteven). 
LIENARDIA IMMACULATA Smvth. 
(Plate xlvii., fig. 94.) 
Clathurella immaculata Smith, Journ. Linn. Soc. Zool., xu., 1876, p. 539, 
pl. xxx., fig. 7. 
In the Hargraves Collection of the Australian Museum there is a 
single specimen labelled ‘‘ Bungaree Norah.” Another series is from the 
geographically intermediate position of Wreck Reef, Coral Sea. Both 
agree with a set of Brazier’s original series from Tarawa, an island of the 
Gilbert or Kingsmill Archipelago. 
Hab. N.S.Wales :—Norah Head (W. H. Hargraves). 
LTENARDIA LUTEA Peuse. 
(Plate xlvii., fig. 95.) 
Borsonia lutea Pease, Proc. Zool. Soe, 1860, p. 143. Jd. Melvill and 
Standen, Journ. of Conch., viii., 1897, p. 398. 
Glyphostoma luteum Bouge and Dautzenberg, Journ. de Conch., Ixi., 1913 
(1914), p. 181. 
Manyilia thereganum Melvill and Standen, Journ. of Conch., viii., 1896, 
p. 291, pl. x., fig. 33. 
It is remarked by Bouge and Dautzenberg how difficult it is to identify 
a species unfigured and so poorly described as this. Different corres- 
pondents have sent me different shells under this name. As a contribution 
to the subject I add here a figure and description of a shell I collected at 
Lizard Island, Queensland, and identified by comparison with a shell from 
Osumi, Japan, sent to me under this name by Mr. H. Fulton. 
