BRACHIOPODA. 
331 
C. marginatus, Penn. 
On all parts of the Irish coast. 
C. ruber, Linn. 
Among oysters from Killinchy, Down. Temp. MSS. Found by Mr. 
Hyndman and myself in different localities on the North-East coast. 
C. albus, Mont. As last. 
C. fuscatus, Brown. As last. 
Newcastle, Co. Down, Oct., 1851. I found a large perfect one in the 
stomach of a haddock ; the first Chiton I remember to have taken from 
the stomach of a fish. 
C. cinereus, Linn. 
On most parts of the Irish coast. 
C. Icevis, Mont. 
On both sides of Ireland, but rare. 
C. albus, Linn. 
North coast of Ireland. 
C. Icevigatus, Flem. 
Obtained in Strangford Lough by Mr. Hyndman and myself. On 
oysters brought to Belfast market from Carlingford and Greencastle (Co. 
Londonderry), W. T. ; Bangor, Co. Down, Mr. It. Patterson. 
C. Hanleyi, Bean. 
Dredged off Arran islands, Co. Galway, by Mr. Barlee, in 1848; Mr. 
Jeffreys. 
CLASS BRACHIOPODA. 
Genus Terebratula. 
T. aurita, Flem. 
The Museum of Irish Industry, 51, Stephen’s Green, Dublin, contains 
a specimen labelled as obtained at Whitehead Bay, County Antrim, 
November, 1839. It was, I believe, taken alive by dredging. 
Alive in deep water, off the Copeland Islands, 1850, Mr. Hyndman. 
T. psittacea, Turt. (sp.), Conch. Diet. p. 5. 
A specimen of this Terebratula, labelled “ Dublin Bay,” was observed 
by Mr. Alder and myself in the Museum of the Royal Dublin Society. 
Turton mentions a single specimen of “ Anomia terebratula ” being 
“ dredged up alive in Dublin Bay, and placed in the Museum of the 
Dublin Society ; ” but we could not ascertain whether the shell now pre- 
served was that alluded to by Turton. 
Anomia psittacea was noticed by him only as an English species. 
