A REVISION OF THE AUSTRALIAN TURRIDE—HEDLEY. 345 
PSEUDODAPHNELLA ATTENUATA Sp). 100. 
(Plate lv., fig. 177.) 
Shell rather solid and tall, lanceolate. Colour uniform yellow. Whorls 
seven remaining. Sculpture:—Large deep meshes are formed on the 
body of the shell by the intersection of the main sculpture; the ribs are 
nine on the penultimate and eleven on the last whorl, elevated, perpen- 
dicular, alternating from whorl to whorl, twice their breadth apart, 
vanishing on the base and below the suture; spirals sharp, elevated cords, 
thirteen on the body whorl, three on the penultimate, over-riding the ribs ; 
on the snout the ribs only survive as nodules; along the fasciole area the 
spirals are entirely different, being three or four closely-packed threads. 
Aperture wide; varix taller and broader than the ribs; seven small 
denticules within the outer lip; sinus small and semicircular; canal short 
and wide. Length 11 mm., breadth 4 mm. 
Hub. Queensland :—Beach, Murray Island (type, self). 
PSEUDODAPHNELLA BARNARDI Brazier. , 
(Plate lv., fig. 178.) 
Clathurella barnardi Brazier, Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., i., 1876, p. 157. 
Oluthwrella tessellata Hedley, Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., xxxii., 1907, p. 484. 
Id. Bouge and Dautzenberg, Journ. de Conch., Ixi., 1913 (1914), 
p. 205 (not Clavatula tessellata Hinds, Zool. “Sulphur,” 1844, p. 23. 
pl. viii., fig. 17). 
Clathurella chichijimana Pilsbry, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philad., 1904, p. 11, 
falls thes takers fe 
? Clathurella maculosa Pease, Am. Journ. Conch., iii., 1867, p. 219, pl. xv., 
fig. 16. 
? Clathurella dichroma Sturany, Pola Exped., 1903, Moll. p. 252, pl. Ixxii., 
fig. 5. : 
The type from the “‘Chevert ” collection, an immature shell, has been 
compared with the specimen from Murray Island figured here. An earlier 
misidentification of this Australian shell as P. tessellata was based on 
material received from Pére Hervier so named. Both colour varieties, 
that with black and that with orange spots (var. lwteopicta Hervier), occur 
in Queensland. A figure of a shell from the Red Sea is so like ours that 
I venture to include U. dichroma as-a probable synonym. If C. muculosu 
Pease should prove, as I suspect, to belong here rather than to C. felina, 
as Tryon indexed it, his name would take precedence. 
Hab. Queensland :—Barnard Island (type); Eclipse Island; Palm 
Island (Brazier); Mast Head Island; Murray Island (specimen here 
figured, self) ; Facing Island (Kesteven). 
