498 
*4. E. Verrill — Catalogue of Marine Mollusca . 
A specimen that I suppose to be the young of this species is a 
small, very thin, translucent, pale yellow, smooth shell, with an acute 
spire, a very small, regularly spiral nucleus, five convex whorls, im- 
pressed suture, and excavated columella-lip. The whorls are evenly 
rounded and with faint traces of shallow spiral lines, no undulations. 
This was dredged by Messrs. Smith and Harger, on Le Have Bank, 
60 fathoms, in 1872. This may possibly be the young of B. hydro- 
phanum. 
Leche (op. cit., p. 59) has referred Gould’s B. ciliatum to “/?. 
ovum Turton,” which he also unites to B. Dalei ( — Liomesus Dalei 
Stirnp., 1865,* or Buccinopsis Dalei Jeffreys, 1867), but this is doubt- 
less an error. 
Grand Bank (coll. Gould) and mouth of McKenzie River, (t. Stimp- 
son.) 
Buccinum ciliatum (Fabr.) Muller. 
Tritonium ciliatum 0. Fabr., Fauna Gronlandica, p. 401, 1780. 
Morch, in Rink’s Grdnland, Tiling, Aftr., p. 84, 1857 ; Arctic Manual, p. 128, 
1875. 
Buccinum ciliatum Moller, Kroyer’s Tidsskrift, iv, p. 85, 1842. 
Reeve, Conch. Ic., iii, Bue., v, 29, 1846, (t. Stimp.) 
Gould, Invert. Massachusetts, ed. I, p. 307 ; ed. II, p. 368, (in part only, not the 
figures). 
Stimpson, Review Northern Buceinums, Canadian Nat., ii, p. [11], Oct., 1865. 
Jeffreys, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., Apr.. 1876, p. 324; Northern Species of Buc- 
cinums, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., vi, p. 425, Dec., 1880. 
Buccinum Molleri Reeve, Icon., iii, 1846, (t. Stimpson, Jeffreys). 
Grand Bank, — coll. Gould, (t. Stimpson). Murray Bay, mouth of 
St. Lawrence River, 112 fathoms, and Riviere du Loup ! — coll. Daw- 
sou. Greenland, 5 to 175 fathoms, — Valorous Exp. (t. Jeffreys). 
White Sea, Spitsbergen, Lapland (t. Jeffreys), Bering’s Straits and 
Arctic Ocean adjacent, and mouth of McKenzie River, (t. Stimpson). 
Dr. Stimpson mentions a specimen from Nova Scotia, received 
from Mr. J. R. Willis, but the collection of Mr. Willis was largely 
* I take this opportunity to state that Liomesus Stimpson should be retained for 
this genus, instead of Buccinopsis Jeffreys (Brit. Conch., iv, p. 297, 1867). The former 
was established in 1865 (Review Northern Buceinums, p. 4), on account of peculiarities 
of the dentition, which were stated, and B. Dalei was cited as the type. Jeffreys erred, 
therefore, in saying that the genus was not defined by Stimpson, as he also did in 
objecting to the meaning of the name, which clearly refers to the smoothness of the 
median plates of the radula, — not to the smoothness of the shell, as Jeffreys imagined. 
Liomesus tburneus (Sars) has, according to the figures of G. O. Sars, the same character 
of dentition given as distinctive of the genus by Dr. Stimpson. 
