﻿PLATE XXIV. 



Philoxene serpens, Phillips, sp. (Page 241.) 



Fig. 



1. Apical view of a specimen, showing numerous small scars of attachment, 



X 2; la, side view. Lummaton (?). Torquay Museum. 



2. Apical view of a specimen with worn surface, but showing signs of ornament, 



X 1*5 ; 2 a, side view. Wolborough. Vicary Collection. 



3. Umbilical view of another specimen. Wolborough. Vicary Collection. 



4. Apical view of a specimen with rather narrower and more numerous whorls ; 



4 a, side view. Lummaton. British Museum. 



5. Defective specimen with very numerous apical whorls, X 4. Lummaton (?). 



Torquay Museum. 



Euomphalus annulatus, Phillips. (Page 250.) 



6. Phillips's type specimen, X 2. Wolborough. Museum of Practical Geology. 



Euomphalus Hecale, Hall. (Page 247.) 



7. Apical view of a much-worn specimen ; 7 a, side view. Wolborough. Museum 



of Practical Geology. 



8. Apical view of a rather crushed specimen ; 8 a, side view. Wolborough. 



Champernowne Collection. 



Euomphalus circularis, Phillips. (Page 248.) 



9. Apical view of a specimen with unusually angulated whorls ; 9 a, side view. 



Wolborough. Vicary Collection. 



10. Apical view of a specimen with very rounded whorls ; 10 a, side view, with 



aperture much broken away. Wolborough. Vicary Collection. 



Euomphalus circularis, Phillips, var. gemmuliper, nov. var. (Page 250.) 



11. Apical view of a specimen with a very depressed spire and a nodulated keel- 



like ridge. Wolborough. British Museum. 



Euomphalus neapolitanus, n. sp. (Page 252.) 



12. Specimen retaining the shell only on the apical whorls; 12 a, view of the 



apical whorls much enlarged. Wolborough. Vicary Collection. 



Euomphalus araneifer, n. sp. (Page 253.) 



13. Very defective specimen, X 3. Lummaton. My Collection. 



