522 PLIOCENE MOLLUSC A. 



RemavliS. — The specimen figured under this name is one of two from the Manx- 

 land drift received from the Rev. S. N. Harrison by Mr. Bell, which we are unable 

 to identify satisfactorily with any I'ecognised species known to us. Messrs. 

 DoUfus and Dautzenberg, moreover, who have been kind enough to examine this 

 form and the one next described, inform me that they cannot find anything, either 

 recent or fossil, to which they can be referred. We have pleasure in dedicating it to 

 its discoverer. 



Genus OCINEBEA, Leach {continued fruvi Vol. I, p. ;347). 

 Ocinebra Kendalli, sp. nov. Plate XLVII, fig. 3. 



Specific Characters. — Shell thick and solid, ovate, turreted ; whorls 5, convex, 

 angulated obtusely below the suture; ornamented by about 10 strong and con- 

 tinuous ribs which extend to the base and the canal, and by strong spiral ridges 

 crossing the ribs which are slightly granular at the points of intersection ; spire 

 short, rapidly diminishing upwards toward a blunt and flattened apex ; suture 

 deep but not channelled ; mouth oval with a distinct and narrow canal ; outer lip 

 angulated above, expanded and strengthened by a prominent varix, with several 

 well-marked tubercles within ; inner lip thin, nearly straight in the middle, 

 covering the pillar. 



Di'Diensions. — L. 25 mm. B. 15 mm. 



Distribution. — Not known living. 



Fossil : Manxland drift. 



Bemarlcs. — This is another of the Rev. S. N. Harrison's discoveries, which, as 

 stated above, neither I nor my friends are able to identify. It is one of the shells 

 which are of a decidedly older type either than that of the Wexford fauna or, 

 generally, of the Manxland beds. 



Genvs EUTHRIA, Gray [continued from Vol. I, p. 363). 

 Euthria cornea (Linne). Plate XL VII, fig. 1, 



1918. Euthria cornea, F. W. Harmer, Plioc. Moll. Gt. Brit., vol. i, pt. iii, p. 361, pi. xxxvii, figs. 7, 8 



Remarks. — The specimen now figured under the present name is also from St. 

 Brth and belongs to the British Museum (Natural History). It differs materially 

 from the variety figured in my first volume, being larger, with more convex whorls, 

 compressed below the suture and a bent and strongly recurved canal. It agrees 

 much more nearly Avith Bellardi's type-figure. 



