KENNAED & WOODWAED *. BEITISH PLIOCENE NON-MAEINE MOLLTJSCA. 191 



fully bears out this view. Helix Sutfonensis can therefore be referred, 

 with the preceding, to Lowe's section Janulus. 



4. EULOTA FEUTICUII (Miill.). 



Form, and Loc. — Red Crag : Hollesley. 



The only known example of this species, now in the British 

 Museum (Natural History), was formerly in the collection of the late 

 Robert Bell. On the tablet to which it is affixed is the following note 

 in his handwriting : " This shell was taken out of a pit near the road 

 occupied as a barnyard, Page's Farm. It was in company with marine 

 shells and LimncBa, and Planorlis was found with it. 1885." Although 

 now extinct in Britain, it has been found in the pleistocene at 

 Barnwell, Stutton,^ and Ilford. Across the Channel it has been 

 recorded from the lower pleistocene of Mosbach, and the middle 

 pleistocene of Cannstadt, and Nussdorf, near Vienna. 



5. Htgromia incaenata (Miill.). 



Form, and Loc. — Red Crag : Walton. 



The only known example of this species was found in 1882 by the 

 late Mr. Groom {alias Groom-JN'apier, the soi-disant ' Prince of Mantua ') 

 at Walton, and is now in the British Museum (Natural History). (See 

 Geol. Mag., 1884, p. 264.) It is not a perfect example, but no doubt 

 can be entertained of this determination. On the continent the 

 species has only been found in the middle pleistocene of Cannstadt, 

 Wtirtemberg. 



6. Htgeoitia hispida (Linn.). 



Selix hispida, Linn.; S. Y. Wood, Crag Moll., vol. i, p. 2, pi. i, 

 figs. 3rt-(?. 



Form, and Loc. — Red Crag : Butley. Norwich Crag : Bramerton 

 Common and Blake's Pit, Bramerton ; Thorpe, Norfolk ; Horstead ; 

 Dunwich ; Yarn Hill ; Bulchamp ; Coltishall (Prestwich). 



This is by far the commonest helicoid in our pliocene beds, though 

 it should be noted that all non-marine forms are rare. On the 

 continent it is unrecorded from any bed older than the lower 

 pleistocene of Mosbach, where it is not infrequent, and it is one of 

 our commonest pleistocene fossils. 



7. Hygeomia eubiginosa (A. Schmidt). Fig. I. 



Form, and Loc. — Norwich Crag : Southwold. 



In the S. Y. Wood Collection at the British Museum (Natural 

 History) is a Hijgromia labelled '' Helix sp." We have identified this 



The single example figured aud described from this locality by Mr.. S. V. Wood 

 (Crag Moll., vol. ii, p. 308, pi. xxxi, fig. 19) is now in the Searles Wood 

 ■ Collection at the Norwich Museum. 



