556 
Transactions of the Society. 
only (Bailey Coll.) of this curious compressed Lagena, previously 
described by Seguenza, with a fissurine aperture, from the Miocene of 
Messina. 
Nodosaria Lamarck, 1816. 
(Glandulina d’Orbigny, 1826.) 
Nodosaria (Glandulina) laevigata d’Orb., plate IX. figs. 14, 15. 
D’Orbigny, xlnn. Sci. Nat., vii. 1826, p. 252, No. 1, plate x. 
figs. 1-3 ; Brady, Rep. Challenger, ix. 1881, p. 490, plate lxi. figs. 
17-22. — Rare at Speeton, the specimen figured is in the Burrows Coll. 
N. (G.) obtusissima Reuss, plate IX. fig. 16. Reuss, SB. k. Ak. 
Wiss. Wien, xlviii. 1863, p. 66, plate viii. fig. 92; Sherborn & 
Chapman, Journ. R. Micr. Soc., 1886, p. 746, plate xiv. fig. 21. — 
One specimen, Burrows Coll. 
N. (G.) cylindracea Reuss, plate IX. fig. 17. Reuss, SB. k. Ak. 
Wiss. Wien, xl. I860, p. 190, plate iv. fig. 1 : also figured as N. 
glandulinoides = Geinitziana , by Neugeboren, Yerh. Mitth. Sieben- 
biirg. Ver. Nat., iii. 1852, p. 37, plate i. fig. 2, and ibid., xi. 1860, 
p. 55, etc. ; and as N. parvula by Dunikowski, from the Lemberg 
Chalk, Kosmos (Lwow), iv. 1879, p. 107, plate, fig. 6. — One specimen, 
Burrows Coll. 
N. (G.) candela Egger, plate IX. fig. 18. Egger, Neues Jahrb., 
1857, p. 304, plate xv. fig. 28. — Described by Egger from the Miocene 
of Ortenburg, Lower Bavaria. In his figure the second chamber is 
slightly smaller than the first, otherwise our specimen corresponds 
with it exactly. Burrows Coll. 
(Nodosaria.) 
N. simplex Silvestri, plate IX. fig. 19. Silvestri, Atti Acc. 
Gioenia, vii. 1872, p. 95, plate xi. figs. 268-272 ; Brady, Rep. 
Challenger, ix. 1884, p. 496, plate lxii. figs. 4-6. — Of rare occurrence 
in our washings. This = N. oligostegia Reuss, referred to in our 
earlier list (this Journal, 1888, p. 384). 
N. longiscata d’Orb., plate IX. fig. 20. D’Orbigny, Foram. Foss. 
Vienne, 1846, p. 32, plate i. figs. 10-12 ; Brady, Quart. Journ. Geol. 
Soc., xliv. 1888, p. 6. — One fragment, Burrows’ collection. Dr. 
Brady has cleared up the doubt as to the exact shape of d’Orbigny’s 
original specimens in the paper referred to above. 
N. calamorpha Reuss, plate IX. fig. 21. Reuss, Denkschr. k. 
Ak. Wiss. Wien, xxv. 1865, p. 129, plate i. fig. 18. See also 
Glandulina crassa Dunikowski, Kosmos (Lwow), iv. 1879, p. 122, 
plate, p. 14, from the chalk of Lemberg. —This and similar forms 
figured on plate IX. are all closely allied to N. radical a Linn., which 
has been met with by us, only in a varietal form at Hunstanton 
(Sherborn), but as trivial names have been given to them, we repeat 
them here for convenience of classification and reference. 
