HEINZIID®. 131 
HEINZIA HISPANICA n. sp. Hyatt. 
Pulchellia (Heinzia) ef. provincialis Nicklés, Mém. Soc. géol. France, Paléontologie, 
No. 4, pls. 6, 7. 
Nicklés’s figures give a species with smaller umbilicus and a shallower, 
wider channel turrowing the costze only, as in Pulchellia. The costz have 
more prominent nodes and are more prominent on the venter, which is 
crossed by them and cut up into waves as in Pulchellia. 
There is one specimen in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, prob- 
ably from Escragnolles, that I have labeled Heinzia atf. hispanica. It 
differs from this species only in having more involute whorls and perhaps 
somewhat coarser costee and possibly the sutures a little more complex. 
HEINzIA PULCHELLIFORMIS h. sp. Hyatt. 
This species, from the collection in the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 
has exactly the form and aspect of some of the typical species of Pulchellia, 
except that the costee are more prominent and cross the inner parts of the 
sides, and the outer row of tubercles has the broad, double character of 
those of the Hemzia group. This has no inner line of tubercles and has 
been considered similar to didayanus, which is a species of Nicklesia. 
Locality: Escragnolles, France. 
Age: Barrémian. 
HEINz1A PROVINCIALIS (d’Orbigny). 
Pl. XV, figs. 19,20; Pl. XVI, figs. 1-3. 
Ammonites provincialis VOrbigny, 1850, Prodrome de Paléontologie, Vol. II, p. 99. 
Pulcnelia provincialis Uhlig, 1883, Denksch. K. Akad. Wiss., Wien, Vol. XLVI, 
pl. 20, fig. 2. 
Assuming Uhlie’s figure to be taken from a species identical with 
VOrbigny’s, the specimen here figured is a true representation of this 
extend internally into lateral single costee and the nodes disappear. The costee become single on the 
sides or may remain dichotomous. The result is a form in some species that is almost an exact 
parallel with some forms of the Hoplitidee. The sutures are simple and have an immature aspect. 
The ventral is rather narrow and is divided by a small truncated siphonal saddle. The first lateral 
saddles are very broad, bifid on one side in H. hoplitiformis and trifid and still broader on the other. 
The first lateral lobes are narrow and trifid or bifid. Thesecond lateral saddles belong to the auxiliary 
series, and are much smaller than the first.and only slightly dentated, while the third and fourth 
saddles are entire. The second lateral lobe is very short and entire,and two other similar smaller 
lokes complete the lateral line. 
This description is taken from Sayn’s figures. 
