212 MANUAL OF THE MOLLUSCA. 



Fossil, nearly 100 species are enumerated by D'Orbigny, 

 ranging from the lias to the upper chalk ; many of them are 

 more nearly related to aporrhais {cerithiadce). 



EOSTELLAEIA, Lam. 



Etymology, rostellum, a little beak. 



Synonym, Fusus, Humphreys. 



Example, E. curta. PI. IV., Fig. 4. 



Shell with an elongated spire ; whorls numerous, flat ; canals 

 long, the posterior one running up the spire ; outer lip more or 

 less expanded, with only one sinus, and that close to the beak. 



Distribution, 8 species. Eed Sea, India, Borneo, China. 

 Mange, 30 fathoms. 



Fossil, 80 species. Neocomian — chalk (=aporrhais?). 6 species. 

 Eocene — . Britain, France, &c. 



The old tertiary species have the outer lip enormously ex- 

 panded, and smooth- edged ; they constitute the section hippo - 

 chrenes of Montfort (e.g., Eost. ampla, Solander. London 

 clay). 



Sub-genus? Spinigera, D'Orbigny. 1847. Shell like rostel- 

 laria ; whorls keeled ; keel developed into a slender spine on the 

 outer lip, and two on each whorl, forming lateral fi-inges, as in 

 ranella. Fossil, 5 species. Inf. oolite — chalk. Britain, France. 



Seraphs, Montfort. (Terebellum, Lam.) 



Etymology, diminutive of terehra, an auger. 



Shell smooth, sub-cylindrical ; spire short or none ; aperture 

 long and narrow, truncated below ; outer lip thin. 



Distribution, 1 species. China. Philippines, 8 fathoms. 

 (Cuming.) 



Fossil, 5 species. Eocene — . London, Paris. 



The animal of terebellum has an operculum like strombus ; its 

 eye-pedicels are simple, without tentacles. (Adams.) In one 

 fossil species, T. fusiforme, there is a short posterior canal, as in 

 rostellaria. 



Family II. — ^Mttbicid^. 



Shell with a straight anterior canal ; aperture entire behind. 



Animal with a broad foot; eyes sessile on the tentacles, cr at 

 their base ; branchial plumes two. Lingual ribbon long, linear ; 

 rachis armed with a single series of dentated teeth; uncini, 

 single. Predatory on other mollusca. The two species belong- 

 ing to the genus Cheletropis, Forbes -= Sinusigera, D'Orbigny, 



