NAUTILID^.. 
157 
I am informed by Dr. Woodward that the specimen representing 
this species in the British Mnsenm Collection was transferred from 
the India Wiiseum. There is no locality recorded against it in the 
Register, but as its identity with Waagen’s species admits of no 
doubt, it may safely be inferred that it came from the same locality 
(as it certainly did from the same horizon) as his fossil. 
Horizon. Carboniferous Limestone (Productns-Limestone). 
Localitij. Salt-Range^ (Punjab), India. 
Temnocheilus ?, sp. 
Sp. Char. Fragment of the body-chamber of a rapidly expanding 
shell (No. C. 2972), the section roughly pentagonal, the ratio of the 
two diameters as 29 : 26. Periphery broad, slightly hollowed out, 
angles rounded, sides sloping outwards towards the rounded edge of 
the umbilicus. The dorsal side with a slight and very narrow 
median furrow. Siphnncle central. 
Judging by the amount of curvature of the inner side the sliell 
had few whorls. Remains of the test adliering to the cast show 
that it is quite smooth, being marked only with delicate lines of 
growth. Part of the scar of the shell-muscle is seen at tlic base of 
tlie body-chamber, on the dorsal side, where also a somewhat 
inconspicuous inner lobe is seen. 
Iloj'izon. Carboniferous Limestone. 
Localitij. Ireland ? 
Temnocheilus Freieslebeni, Geinitz. 
1841. Nautilus Freiesleheni, Geinitz, in Leonhard and Bronn’s Neues 
Jahrbnch, p. 637, Taf. xi. If. 1, a-c. 
1844. Nautilus Freiesleheni, de Verneuil, Bull. Soc. Geol. de France, 
tom. i. ser. ii. p. 510. 
1848. Nautilus Freiesleheni, CemitT., Die Verstein. des deutschen Zech- 
steingebirges, p. 6, Taf. iii. ff. 7, a-c (same figures as those in the 
Neues Jahrb. loc. cit.). 
1848. Nautilus Freiesleheni, Howse, Cat. of the Fossils of the Permian 
System of the Counties of Northumberland and Durham, p. 19. 
1 The “Salt-Range” hills form the extreme north-western boundary of the 
Punjab, between the Indus and Jhelum, and are in the form of a semicircle 
whose convexity points southward. For full information respecting the geology 
of this part of India, see ‘ Manual of the Geology of India ’ (Pt. I. Peninsula 
Area), by Medlicott and Elan ford, Calcutta, 1879. 
