XVI 



COTfCHOLOGIA IXDICA. 



Physa. 



(?) Coromandelica/ Dunker. 



Camptoceeas. 

 Austeni, Bl. t. 158, f. 3, 4. 

 lineata, Bl. t. 158, f. 5, 6. 

 terebra, Bl. t. 158, f. 1, 2. 



LiJiy^iA.^ 

 acuminata, Lam. t. 69, f. 8, 9. 

 amygdalns, Trosch. t. 69, f. 7, 10. 

 auricularia,-^ Linnaeus, 

 brevicanda, Sow. t. 158, f. 7. 

 chlamySjS Bn. t. 69, f. 5, 6. 

 luteola, Lam. t. 70, f. 5, 6. 

 marginata," Michaud, in Drap. Sup. 

 ovalis. Gray, t. 70, f. 2, 3, 4. 

 peregra,^ Linnaeus, 

 pinguis, Dokm, t. 70, f. 7, 8, 10. 

 rufescens, Gray, t. 69, f . 1, 4 ; t. 70, 



f. 1, 9. 

 stagnaUs,^ Lin. 

 tigrina,® Dokm. 

 truncatula,^ Muller. 



acanthica, Dokm (as of Lea), t. 



110, f. 10. 

 baccata, Gould, t. 75, f. 1 to 4. 

 Batana, Gould, t. 74, f. 8, 9. 

 Broti, Dohrn, t. 71, f. 2, 3. 

 confasa, Dohrn, t. 72, f. 4. 

 datura, Dohrn, t. 73, f. 10. 



episcopalis, Lea, t. 72. f . 7 ; t. 75. 



f. 5, 7. 

 fuscata. Bom, t. 109, f. 4. 

 gloriosa, Antk. t. 72, f. 1, 2. 

 Hanleyi, G. A. t. 110, f. 5. 

 Herculea, Gould, t. 72, f . 5 ; t. 109, 



f. 7. 



Hugeli, Phil. t. 71. f. 5, 6. 

 humerosa,'" Gould (Tavoy). 

 Iraradica, Bl. t. 71, f. 1. 

 j jugicostis, Bd. t. 110, f. 8, 9. 

 Layardi, Dohrn, t. 73, f. 9. 

 lineata. Gray, t. 71, f. 7. 

 Menkiana, Lea, t. 110, f. 6. 

 pagodula, Gould, t. 153, f. 3. 

 Peguensis,^^ Ant. t. 72, f. 6. 

 I praemorsa, Tryon, t. 153, f. 2. 

 pyramis, Bn. t. 110, f. 3, 4. 

 ' Reevei,Brot. t. 72, f. 3 : t.153, f. 1, 5. 

 Riqueti, Grat. t. 71. f. 10. 

 rudis, Lea, t. 74, f. 7, 10. 

 scabra, Miill. t. 73, f . 1 to 4 ; var. 



elegans, t. 73, f . 5. 6, 7 ; Tar. 



spinulosa, t. IV:, f. 7. 

 spinata, G. A. t. 109, f. 1. 

 terebra, Bn. t. 71, f. 8, 9. 

 tigrina, Hatt. t. 110, f. 1, 2. 

 Tirouri r Per. t. 74, f. 5, 6. 

 tuberculata, Miill. t. 74, f . 1 to 4 : 



t. 73, f. 8, as Layardi. 

 Tariabilis,i2 Bn. t. 109, f. 2, 3, 5, 6 : 



var. spinosa, t. 75, f. 5, 6. 

 zonata, Bn. t. 71, f. 4. 



Navicella. 

 caerulescens. Reeve, t. 137, f. 2, 3, 

 compressa. Pear. t. 137, f. 1, 4. 

 Live.sayi, Dokm, t. 137, f. 8, 9. 

 reticulata, Reeve, t. 137, f. 5, 6. 

 squamata, Dohrn, t. 157, f. 1, 4. 



Anctlus.' 

 Ceylanica, Bn. t. 81, f. 1, 4. 

 verruca, Bn. t. 81, f. 2, 3. 



Camptonyx. 

 Thoobaldi, Bn. t. 81, f. 5, 6. 



SoccrNEA.2 

 acuminata, Bl. t. 68, f. 7. 

 Baconi, Pf. t. 68, f. 1, 4. 

 Bensoni, Pf. t. 67, f. 9. 

 Ceylanica, Pf. t. 158, f. 10. 

 collina, Bl. t. 68, f. 8, 9, 10. 

 crassiuscula, Bn. t. 68, f. 5, 6. 

 daucina, Pf. t. 67, f. 7. 

 Girnarica, Tb. t. 67, f. 5, 6. 

 Indica, Pf. t. 67, f. 1, 4. 

 Pfeifferi, Rossm. (Cashmire). 

 plicata, Bl. t. 67, f. 8. 

 pntris, Lin. (Cashmire). 

 rutiiaiis, Bl. t. 67, f. 10. 

 Bnbgranosa, Pf. t. 158, f. 8, 9. 

 semiscrica, Gould, t. 67, f. 2, 3. 

 vitrca, Pf. t. 68, f. 2, 3. 



LiTHOTIS. 

 riipicola, Bl. t. 81, f. 7. 

 tumida, Bl. t. 81, f. 8, 9. 



' Tho A. Baconi of Bourgigunt, if distinct, has not been 

 tomid liy our Indian collectors. 



' Compare with our species the S. ru{ros,i of Pfciffcr (Mon. 

 IK'iic. vol. 2, p. 517). said to have only two and a half whorls, 

 an extremely sliort s])irc, and to come from nctu- Pondiohcrry. 



* i^Iul. Bliit. 1862. Two ininiaturo specimens of a short- 

 .•<pired Phy.-i,-* wore obtained at Quilon by Benson, but have not 

 the citrinatt-d spire of this (.Vustralian?) species. 



• Kuster's monograph has been vainly studied. Besides 

 sundry from that latitudiniman locality " E, Indies," there is a 

 L. oliva(? = lutoola)from Bengal, and a L. striata (as of Benson!) 

 from B)irrakiK>n'. Mr, W. Blanforti hits sent us a specimen from 

 neiir U, Thibet, of what proves to be the L. scalaris of the 

 Tonrh. leonica, which is perhaps the bitlirmis of Kuster, and 

 I")*-=il.ly the lugolis of Kobelt (Mai, Blat. 1S72V It is possibly 

 a distortiMl jHTi-gm, In Wiegmann's Archives for 1837 is a 

 piper by Tmschel on the Oangetic s{M>cies. but the descriptions 

 are much too brief. Itis prunum seoms our pinguis. var. (f. 8), 

 and not unlikely is the suecinea of Deshayes (Voy, Belane. Zool. 

 pi. 2, f, 1."?. 14) fn>m Mnlabir, which is not the shell so termed 

 in Rocve's 'leonica' ; his patola wo refer to rufescens; hie 



impura is unknown to us ; his cerasum, sulcatnla, and nucleus, 

 are evidently cither ovalis or luteola. 



' From -Vffghanistan and Cashmire: too well known to 

 figure. L. Baotriana of Hutton (inadequately described in J. 

 Asi. Beng. 1849, p. 656) w;is, perhaps, peregra. 



' L. hians of Sowerby"s monograph (C. Icvin. Lim. f. 57. a) 

 is the young. 



■ From the Shan Provinees. 



' The type is just like a streaked form of Benson's L. bulla ; 

 wo doubt it as a species. 



» See also M. fluctnosa of Gould (Pr. Bost. N. H. vol. 2. p. 

 219 ; Otia, p. 200) from Tavoy. which is too curtly described to 

 be identified. The Travancore Clea ! Anneslyi (Pseudoliva 

 Nassoides Hani.) of Benson (An. Nat. H. 1860," p. 258), lives 

 in saltish water. 



"> Proc. Bost, H. voL 2 (1847); Otia, p. 200. "AUied 

 to M. Virginiea, Say." 



" The reference to the American Journal must be expunged ; 

 it is only a manuscript species. 



" Too much latitude has l>een given to tbis species. We haTe 

 figured the variabilis, var. vittataof Theobald (J. Asi, Beng. 



