280 Catalogue of the Shells of Connecticut. 



158. Helix arborea, Say, Northford and Huntington. Gould, 

 fig. 110. 



159. Helix chersina, Say, Stonington and Hartford. Gould, 

 fig. 105. 



160. Helix cellaria, Miiller, Huntington. Gould, fig. 104. 



161. Helix electrina, Gould, Huntington and Stonington. 

 Gould, fig. 111. 



162. Helix fraterna. Say, Stratford. B. J. N. H., Vol. HI, 

 pi. 10, fig. 2. 



163. Helix fuliginosa, Griffiths, Stratford. 



164. Helix gularis. Say, Weston. Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci., Yol. 

 n, p. 156. 



165. Helix hirsuta. Say. Stonington and Weston. Gould, 

 fig. 116. 



166. Helix indentata, Say, Plymouth, Conn. Gould, fig. 109. 



167. Helix hneata. Say, Stratford and Orange. Gould, fig. 103. 



168. Helix labyrinthica. Say, Stonington and Hartford. Gould, 

 fig. 106. 



169. Helix minuscula, Binney, Hartford. Whittemore. 

 *170. Helix Trumbulli, Nobis, Stonington, at low-water mark. 



171. Helix monodon, Rackett, Orange. Gould, fig. 113. 



172. Helix pulchella, Miiller, Stratford. Gould, fig. 102. 

 *173. Helix Sayii, Binney. B. J. N. H., Yol. HI, pi. 16. 



174. Helix suppressa, Say, Housatonic shore and Weston. 



175. Helix striatella, Anthony, Stratford, Huntington, and 

 Stonington. Gould, fig. 112. 



176. Hehx subglobosa ? Binney, Weston. Gould, p. 172. 



177. Helix tridentata, Say, Stratford. Gould, fig. 115. 



178. Pupa contracta, Say, shore of Housatonic. Gould, fig. 117. 

 *179. Pupa cortricaria, Say, Orange. B. J. N. H., Yol. HI, 



p. 379, pi. 3, fig. 2. 



180. Pupa pentodon. Say, Northford and Huntington. Gould, 

 fig. 120. 



*170. H. Trumbulli, Nobis — spire much depressed or very little elevated ; su- 

 tures slightly marked, and umbilicus large and deep ; color a dull white with a tinge 

 of green ; shell thin and translucent ; diameter about y\j\j- of an inch, height ^-^ 

 inch ; found on the shore of Long Island Sound near high-water mark, and occa- 

 sionally near low-water mark at Stonington, by Mr. J. H. Trumbull. [May not 

 this shell be Margarita arctica? — Eds.] 



*173. Binney says the H. Sayii " inhabits all the northern parts of the United 

 States, from Illinois to Maine." 



"179. This shell I found in the bark of a butternut tree by the roadside in Orange. 



