Botany and Zoology. 283 
Depth. Remarks. 
A fragment. 
xt, w. to 1 f.| Abundant and large. 
One valve. 
Dead specimens abundant, 
Moderately abundant. 
One valve. 
— to 2 f. Very abundant. 
Rare. 
. a, 
Petricola dactylus, 
*Petricola pholadiformis, 
*Mactra lateralis, 2ftoefi| “ 
Maetra solidissima, 10 f.  |Rare.and small. 
*Kellia planulata c 
? 
ynontacuta elevata,* One valve. 
Tellina agilis (St.), 2 f. to 6 f. |Moderately abundant. 
ellina tenta,* — to 6f. , p 
*Tellina fusca, —toéf. _ . 
Cumingia tellinoides,* neds y! 
len ensis, Not very abundant. 
Solecurtus bidens,* Rare. : 
Mya arenaria, Littoral. |Very abundant. , 
ee contracta, Abundant. 
hatina papyracea, 3f.  |Two specimens. 
*Cochlodesm nun, f. re. : 
Yyonsia hyalina, — to 6 f. |Moderately abundant, — 
iT racia Conradi,* few pa valves. 
jbandora trilineata, 3 f. to 6 f, |Rare. 
Saxicava distorta, 3: 
_Turdo, Theea, Ascidia, a Cynthia, a Molgula, two or three Aplysiz, and 
“x or seven Botrylli and Polyclina. si 
ecapitulation—One Cephalopod, forty-three Prosibranchs, one Pul- 
jean three Tectibranchs, one Nudibranch, forty-one Lamellibranchs, 
es. 
ae these, *Astarte castanea, *Cyprina islandica,* *Mesodesma arc- 
-two 
Ge ag Cape Cod. 
the Ca stated by Mr, Stimpson, in his “Shells of New England,” to pass 
i her 
an g about Montauk would probably discover nearly all the 
