168 report — 1856. 



c. Peninsula of Old or Lower California, 23-32°, Pacific Shores. (Parallel of the 

 Canaries.) San Pedro, near Is. Catalina. San Diego, 33°*. Bay of Magda- 

 lena, with Is. Margarita, 24'5°. Cape St. Lucas, 23°. 



III. Tropical Fauna. \. Gulf District. (Tropic— ? 32°). a. Calif ornian Coast. 

 Cape Palmaf, 23-5°. La Paz, 24°. Is. and Cape San Jose, 2b°%. Loretto and 

 Bay of San Juan, 26-5°.$ Gulf San Miguel, 29° ||. b. Mexican Coast. Guay- 

 mas, 28°. Lobos Is. 27°%. Mazatlan, 23° (with the Is. Crestin, Ciervo, Per- 

 mano, Venado, &c). Is. Tres Marias, 22°. Isabella Is., between these and 

 San Bias, 21 '5°. 



b. Mexican and Central American District. (Parallel of Senegambi a.) Revillagi- 

 gcdos Is. 18°. not yet searched, perhaps connected with the Gulf fauna. Aca- 

 pulco, 17°. Gulf Tehuantepec, 16°. Sonsonati and Guacomayo (or Guaya- 

 moco), 14°. Gulf of Fonseca or Conchagua, 14°. Realejo or Real Llejos, 13°. 

 Gulf of Papagayo, 11°. Gulf of Nicoya, 10°, with Punta Arenas within the 

 Gulf, and Cape Blanco at the entrance. Gulf of Dulce**, or Bay of Costa Rica, 

 with Is. of Cana and Pueblo Nuovo, 9°. Bay of Montijo and Bavof Honda, 8°. 

 Is. ofQuibo, 7°. 



c. Panama District. (Parallel of Liberia.) The town is in lat. 8° 49', and in the 

 Bay are the Is. of Taboga, Rey, Perico, San Jose, and Sabogatf- 



d. Ecuador District. Atacamas, with Cape San Francisco X%> 1° N. Bay of Ca- 

 raccas, '5° S. Is. Plata, 1°. Gulf of Guayaquil, with Punta St. Elena, Punta 

 Arenas and Is. Puna, 2°. Payta, 5°. 



e. Galapagos or Tortoise Is., on the equator in long. 90°, consisting of six large 

 and seven small islands; those most quoted are, Charles Is., James Is., Albe- 

 marle Is., Chatham Is., and Hood's Is.§§ 



28. Scarcely any mention is made of W. American shells by Linnaeus, 

 Chemnitz, and the older conchologists generally. A very few handsome 

 species from the Panama province, such as Oliva porphyria, &c, had found 

 their way into European collections and books, perhaps through the pearl 

 oyster trade ; or even, it may be, introduced indirectly through East Indian 

 commerce. But our first direct acquaintance with the shells of the Panama 



* The shells of this place rank somewhat better with Lower than with Upper California, 

 with which it is locally and politically connected. It was the first settlement on the coast, 

 having been founded by the Jesuits in 1769. There is another San Diego in the Gulf of 

 Tehuantepec. 



f Not to be confounded with Cape Palmar, on the equator, in long. 80° ; nor with Cape 

 Palmas on the Guinea coast, where are islands (St. Thomas and St. Vincent) liable to be 

 associated with the Antilles. 



X There is also a San Jose between the two capes at the end of the promontory, and 

 another in the harbour of San Francisco. An island of the same name is in the Bay of 

 Panama. 



§ Besides this station and the Straits of De Fuca, there is a San Juan on the opposite shore 

 near Guaymas ; another near San Bias; a Point on the coast near Lake Nicaragua ; and a little 

 island between Is. Catalina and San Diego. 



|| There is another San Miguel near the Bay of Fonseca, in long. 88'5°; also a port in the 

 Bay of Panama, lat. 8° 10' ; and an island outside Sta Barbara. 



% Not to be confounded with Lobos Is., Peru. 



** Another Gulf of Dulce opens out of the Bay of Honduras. 



ff This is quoted by Prof. Adams as a corruption of Taboga. It is, however, marked in 

 the charts as a very small island, N.W. of San Jose and one-third of the distance between 

 that and Taboga. A river Chiriqui is also quoted as in the Bay of Panama. Perhaps it is 

 near the town of the same name in Veragua. There is another Chiriqui between Greytown 

 and Chagres. 



XX There is a Bay of San Francisco in Lower California on the Pacific side, in lat. 30°, and 

 another near San Miguel within the Gulf. Also a Bar of the same name in the Gulf of Tehu- 

 antepec. 



§§ Another Hood's Is. is in lat. 21° S., long. 135° W. Which of these is the " Lord Hood's 

 Is." often quoted in Mr. Cuming's Coll., is not known. It is possible that some species be- 

 longing to the Galapagos fauna have been passed over, from their being assigned to the Poly- 

 nesian station. 



