370 JOURNAL OF CONCHOLOGY, VOI,. II, NO. 12, OCTOBER, 1906. 



H. [Vallonia] pulchella {Mull.). — Arnside, Westmorland. 



H. [Pyramidula] rupestris {Dmp.). — Arnside; and Furness 

 district, Lanes. 



H. nemoralis Li/me. — "A very variable shell occurring almost 

 everywhere, though the varieties are somewhat local. They vary in 

 color, being white, yellow, red, or brown. They are commonly either 

 plain or with one, three or five stripes, rarely two or four stripes. 

 Occasionally they are found with the margin of the aperture white, in 

 which case the bands are usually transparent lines. — T.G." 

 var. albolabiata. — Oban, 1850. 

 var. carnea. — Miller's Dale, 1873. 



var. castanea. — Between Naze and Freckleton, Lanes., 1824. 

 var. hyalozonata. — Llandudno, on the road to Conway, for half 

 a mile on each side of the road, 1853. 



H. pomatia Linne. — In the year 1877, my father, who was then 

 above 80 years of age, spent a whole day with a friend hunting for 

 these shells among the Cotswold Hills, near Leckhampton. They 

 found a considerable number. 



H. pygmaea Drap. [=Punctum pygmaeum]. — Among dead 

 leaves and stones in gravelly soil, Lancaster, 1833. Mr. James Glover, 

 of Lancaster, used to collect the leaves and put them in water. The 

 sediment frequently contained a number of shells. 



H. [Hygromia] rufescens {Penn.). — 



var. alba. — Windsor and Richmond, Surrey, 1840. 



H. [Helicella] virgata {Da Costa). — 



var. alba. — Clontarf, near Dublin; also in Connemara between 

 Clifden and Roundstone, W. of L-eland, 1859. 



var. leucozona. — Exeter and Exmouth, 1838. 



var. submaritima. — Blowick, near Southport, 1872. 



H. pisana MiUler. — Tenby, 1838. 



Limnaea auricularia {Linne). — Aigburth, near Liverpool, in 

 ditches, nearly dried up in summer, not common, 1836. 



Neritina fluviatilis {Linne). — Plentiful on the weir across the 

 river Lune just above Lancaster, 1830. 



I found they were still there in 1874, but I am told they have now 

 disappeared. 



Paludina achatina {Dmp.) [=Vivipara vivipara {Linne)]. 

 Canal at Birmingham ; also at Tunbridge, 1842. 



P. vivipara {Anctt.) [= Vivipara contecta {Millet)\ — Plentiful 

 in ditches at Birkdale. 



When a small reservoir at Beswick, near Manchester, was emptied 

 and cleaned out some years ago, there were large numbers of this 

 species in the mud, and the children of the neighbourhood enjoyed 



