96 
his species resembles Æ. T’ryoni, but is thinner, and is a 
longer shell for the same number of whorls—the whorls are more 
convex; whilst Tryoni has a more oblique aperture, narrower 
base, which is oblique on the left side. 
In t the absence of the tip, it is uncertain to place the species in 
the Section Mucronalia, to some species of which it has some 
resemblance. 
North Coast of Tasmania; W. F. Petterd!. 
Eulima Mayii, Tate, spec. nov. 
Shell solid, white, highly polished. Spire with a slight apical 
twist from before backward, gradually tapering to an extremely 
or a little higher than wide, im ied oblique; outer lip retreating 
from the middle line to the s 
Length, 7:75; Mom 2:5 ; wa of aperture, 2:25 m 
Seems to resem : intermedia, ut has the jaat whorl 
approximately about half the m of the shell, instead of one- 
third, as in the Mediterranean speci 
I employ the species-name in relie ent to my coadjutor, 
under which it has been known in manuscript among Tasmanian 
collectors [ R. Tate 
East Coast of Tasmania, south of Swansea; W. L. May. 
Eulima Tryoni, spec. nor. 
E. Tenisoni (pars), Tryon, Man. Conch., VIII., t. 68, f. 16, 
non p. 269; E. Tenisoni, Tate, T.R.S., S. Aust., XXII, 1898, 
SL 
This is the shell figured by Tryon as Æ. Tenisoni, but it is a 
different species to E. micans, T.-Woods, to which he applied that 
name. It is related to E. latipes, Watson, which has a broader 
base, patulous neo lip, and has a somewhat rapid increase of 
growth of the s 
Common in s. Australia; i rd Victoria; and at Derwent 
Estuary, Tasmania, W. L. ; 
Stylifer Petterdi, rom. mutand. 
i S. robusta, Petterd, Journ. Conch., 1884, p. 140, non Pease, 
860. 
Leven Heads, Tasmania, 
Syrnola Harrissoni, spec. nov. 
Shell lanceolate, ie are smooth, white. Apex hetero- 
strophe, small, of one and a-half who rls. Spire whorls five, 
rapidly increasing in icai nelly flat, suture impressed ( 
specimens examined are more or less ess corroded, and present, in 
consequence thereof, a usaid at the posterior suture). 
