BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 1876. 247 



Brugnone (I'Ab. G.)— On Chemnitzia pusilla and C. tere- 

 bellum. — Osservazioni suUe Chemnitzia pusiUa e Chemnitzia 

 terebellmai, P/n7. — Bull. Soc. Mai. Ital. 1876, ii. pp. 210 to 215 

 and tav. C. fig. i, 2. 



The results of the author's observations are that the Chem- 

 nitzia pusilla of Philippi is not that of Jeffreys and Homes, but 

 another form near Odostoviia laciea L., and that the species of 

 those two authors ought to be re-named ; also that C. terehclliwi of 

 Philippi differs from C. pisilla of the same author and has affinity 

 with Odostoniia (^Pyrgidind) indistinda Mont. 



Higgins (Rev. Henry H., M.A.) and ^/rarrat (F. P.)— West 

 Indian Mollusca (Argo Expedition). — MoUusca of the 

 Argo Expedition to the West Indies, 1876. — Liverpool 

 Museum Report, No. i, 19 pp. and i plate. 



Lists of mollusca collected at various points on the voyage, 

 given as materials for future investigators. 



Madeira (4 univalves); Antigua (31 univalvesand 19 bivalves); 

 Barbuda (30 univalves and 4 bivalves); St. Kitt's (2 freshwater 

 and 4 land shells); Dominica (17 univalves, 2 bivalves and 6 land 

 shells); St. Vincent (27 univalves and 2 bivalves); Grenada (i 

 Murex, n. sp.); Trinidad (i univalve, 3 freshwater and 2 land 

 shells); La Guayra (12 univalves and i bivalve); Venezuela (i 

 Bidimus); Caracas (3 land shells); Puerto Cabello (10 univalves 

 and 3 bivalves); Tucacas (42 univalves and 30 bivalves); Santa 

 Marta (28 univalves and 10 bivalves); Point Savanilla (15 univalves 

 and 2 bivalves); Cartagena (i Strombus); Havana (21 univalves, 

 10 bivalves and 4 land shells); Vera Cruz (19 univalves and 2 

 bivalves); Nassau (68 univalves and 17 bivalves); Long Key 

 Island (31 univalves and 3 bivalves); Athol Island (16 univalves 

 and I bivalve); and Abaco (63 univalves, 3 land shells and 16 

 bivalves). Two new species are described and figured: Scoiisia 

 Barbudensis (Barbuda) and Miirex {Chtcoreus) imbricatus 

 (Grenada). 



