247 Costa Rtco Miocene — OLvSSon 75 



Height 10.75, diameter 3.25 mm. 



The Drillia lithocolleta Watson is a recent deep-water 

 species, dredged by the Challenger and the Blake, at several 

 stations in the West Indies and off the Florida coast, from depths 

 of 400 to nearly 1000 fathoms. The Bocas shell seems to be 

 very closely related to the recent species; differing only from 

 Ball's figure in the Blake Report (plate 11, fig. 61), in being 

 somewhat more slender, with heavier tubercles and a longer base. 



Gatun Staze: Bocas del To7''o. 



Drillia cocoslna, n, sp. Plate 5, figure 14 



Shell small, glass}^ or translucent in texture; spire twice or 

 more the length of the last whorl and the canal; whorls 8 plus, 

 the earlier ones missing; no anal fasciole; the sculpture consists 

 at first of a lower row of small tubercles, but a second or upper 

 row soon begins to appear and on the last whorl, this upper set 

 of tubercles is very nearly equal to the lower; the last v\^horl has 

 about 13 of these tubercles, in addition the whorl is finel}^ sculp- 

 tured with fine, regular, closely spaced spiral threads which cov- 

 er the entire whorl and the canal, but leaving the tops of the 

 tubercles smooth; aperture ovate, with a short, twisted canal. 

 Length 12, diameter 3.5 mm. 



This interesting species from the shales near the city of 

 Bocas del Toro, is related to the recent Drillia oleacina Ball 

 dredged from rather deep water in the Gulf of Mexico and else- 

 where in the West Indies. In differs from that species in being 

 less slender and with a larger body- whorl. 



Gatun Sage: Bocas del Toro. 



