168 
it occurs in Limestone, at Shalcomb, on the Isle of 
Wight. I am also indebted to the liberality of the same 
friend to science John Holloway, Esq. lor the specimens. 
PHASIANELLA angulosa. 
TAB. CL XXV.— Fig. 2. 
Spec. Char. Conical, smooth ; whorls subcari- 
nated ; aperture nearly round. 
T his differs from the last only in the angular form of the 
lower part of each whorl, which makes the sides of the 
spire straighter. 
From Shalcomb, along with the last. 
PHASIANELLA minuta. 
TAB. CLXXV.— PYg\ 3 . 
Spec. Char, Elongated, smooth ; volutions five 
or six, obscurely squared ; aperture oblong. 
Scarcely two lines long ; the flatness of the upper parts 
of the whorls, which separates them from each other, is 
not easily overlooked. 
From the Isle of Wight. The figure on the left is a 
magnified representation. 
