﻿PEOCEEDINGS OF UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 365 



Below tlie sboLilcler the cingiili are numerous and prominent, crossing 

 the prominent narrow ribs so as to produce a distinct, but not coarse, 

 canceUation. It most resembles the figures of B. clegans and B. angii- 

 losa of Sars. It is perhaps the original B. declivis (Loveu), but does not 

 agree with Sars's figure. 



Bela tenuicostata M. Sars. 



G. O. Sars, op. cit., j). 237, pi. 17, figs. I a, h; pi. ix. fig. 6 (dentition). 

 Specimens apparently identical with this species were dredged b^' me, 

 in moderate depths, at Eastport, Me,, in 1804, 1808, and 1870, It was 

 also taken this season at stations 893 and 891, in 3G5 to 372 fathoms. It 

 is closely related to B. decussata Couth., but has smaller and more numer- 

 ous ribs, and is, therefore, more finely cancellated. It may be onl^' a 

 variety of i>. decussata. The latter is easily distinguished from all our 

 other species bj' its oval form, rounded, scarcely shouldered whorls, 

 crossed by very numerous 'small, narrow, flexuous, sigmoid ribs, which 

 are strongly bent backward near the autuie, in conformity with the verj' 

 distinct, rounded sinus of the lip. The whole surface, except close to 

 the deep suture, is cpvered with numerous rather fine, close, raised, 

 revolving cinguli, giving the surface a rather finely and regularly can- 

 cellated structure. 



Bela Trevelyana (Turtou) H. & A. Adams. 



This has been recorded by Jeffreys from the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. 

 He formerly united B. decussata with it, but has subsecjuently (in Mol- 

 lusca of Valorous Expedition) distinguished them. I have myself seen 

 no American shells agreeing clearly with English specimens of B. 

 Trevelyana. The latter resembles B. decussata in form and size, but has 

 the ribs nearly straight and the cancellation coarser than in our shell. 



Bela impressa ? (Beck) Morch, Catal. Moll. Spitzberg, p. 17, 1869. 



Pleurotoma imjiressa Leche, Kongl. Svenska Vet.-Akad. Handl., Bd. IG, p. 54, 

 111. 1, tig. IG, 1878 (author's separate copy). 



I refer doubtfully to this species a small but very distinct shell 

 frecpiently dredged by us, in 10 to 70 fathoms, all along the coast, from 

 ofi' Cape Cod to ]!^ova Scotia. It was also dredged this season at sta- 

 tions 812 to 815, in 27 fathoms, off Block Island. 



The shell is greenish white, short- oval, with about five whorls, which 

 are distinctly flattened and angularly shouldered near the deep suture. 

 There are on the last whorl about twenty rather broad, flat ribs, which 

 are a little i)romiuent and usually slightly nodose at the shoulder, but 

 they disappear a short distance below. The most characteristic feature 

 is that the surface is marked by rather fine, but regular and distinct, 

 revolving grooves or suJciy which are rather distant, with flat intervals. 

 Of these there are usually about three or four on the penultimate whorl, 

 and about twenty on the last, the greater number being below the mid- 

 dle, on the siphon, where they become closer j one of the sulci, just below 



