MOLLUSCA — IIKDLKY. 



349 



TURRITELLA PARVA, Au;,as, sp. 



I'ovGula parva, Angas, Proc. Zool. Sue, 1.^77, p. 171, pl.xxvi., f. 17. 



►Stations 37, 49. 



A few specimens were taken off Port Kembla in 63-75 fathom.s 

 and one from 50-52 fathoms off Botany Bay. Two example.s 

 were received in 1880 from 35 fathoms off Port Stephens. 



Wliile on the subject of Tii,rritAla, I may mention in reference 

 to Miss Donald's recent paper* that Turritellasinithiaua, Donald, 

 and T. creimldta, Donald, described as from the neighljourhood 

 of Sydney, are not Australian, but probably Atlantic forms. T. 

 godetfroijaiia, Donald, is T. tasuiaaica, Ten. Woods, noii Reeve, 

 and T. atkiiisoni, Tate ct May ; over the latter Miss Donald's 

 name has four months' priority. If I have understood that 

 species, T. quadrata, Donald, is the common Tasmanian form, 

 which I have not seen from the coast of New South Wales ; 

 while T. sinuata, Reeve, is the common form in New South 

 Wales, and does not extend to Tasmania. 



Family SOLARIID^. 



SOLARIUM, Lamarck. 

 SOLARIUM MAXIMUM, Fhilippi. 



Solarmm Tnaximuvi, Philippi, Zeitsch. f. Malak., 1848, p. 173. 

 IlL, Conch. Cab., Bd.ii., Abth 8, Solarium, 1853, p. 6, pi. 1, 



f. 2, 3. 



Stations 13, 28, 49. 

 (Fig. 73.) 



This is the species locally recorded! as tSolarium Icevigatum, 

 Lamarck. Pelseneer| in- 

 vestigated Gould's genus 

 Agadina and showed 

 that though the original 

 species was probably 

 founded on thePteropod 

 Limacina antarctica, S. 

 P. Woodward, the other 

 species so unhappily 

 added by H. & A. Adams 

 are larval Gasteropoda, 

 and concludes : — " But 

 to what streptoneural 



Fig. 73. 



* Donald — Proc. Mai. Soc, iv., 1900, pp. 47-.55, pi. v. 



t Whitelegge— Pro. Roy. Soc. N.S. Wales, xxiii., ]S89, p. 260. 



+ Pelseneer — Chall. Rep., Zool., xxiii., 1888, p. 37. 



