S.A- NAT., VOL. XTV. 
NovsMacR, 1932. By Bernard C. Cotton and f. K. Godf^y. .vv 
showmt^ citjaiiy tlirough the she!!; body whorl tumidly develo[»ed; 
rfutuce distinct; mouth pyriform, small, umbilical area broadly 
excavate. Height 4-, diam. 1.5 mm. Uncommon. GuU St. Vin- 
cent. (Type locality — 50 fathoms, off Maria Island, Tasmania^ 
A species without any marked characters; nnicli narrower than 
E. tenisoni and the mouth is rather more elongate and less in- 
flated; both this and A. leinsoyti have an outer lip retreating in 
the upper part. It has a different mouth from E. vidiscreta, and 
in this h comes ver)- close to K. commensalis which has a more 
accute pnstoconch. 'I’asmanian specimens are generally straighten 
and larger than ours. 
E. frJeata Hedle\' 1907. ‘H'lie Smoothed Eulima.” Sub- 
cylindrical, scarcely tapering, blunt at either end; apical wliorls 
white, opaque, lower semitransparent, permitting the axis to be 
clearly : ecu througli the wall; smooth; protoconch dome-shaped; 
adult whoils live: suture, above scarcely distinguisliable; below 
linear; mouth rcgularh' pvriform, a slight callus on the coliimeUa. 
Height 4.25, diam. 1.15 mm. Dredged — Cape Borda, also St. 
Francis Island, 35-55 fatlioms. ( IVpe locality — 80 fathoms, off 
Narrabcan, N.S.W.). Allied to E. paxilhis Hedley 1904, from 
which it differs by being nearly twice as large and by having 
longer, narrower aperture. 
E. roegerae sp. nov. PI. I, fig. II. “Roeger’s Euiima.’’ 
Elongate, [■)yramidal, solid, shining; opaque white; smooth, ex- 
cept for exceedingly fine lines of growth; protoconch small, ob- 
lique, of two turns, smooth; adult whorls eleven, v^'ery slightly 
convex, last rather small; base smooth; suture narrow, margined, 
not impressed; mouth [lyriform; outer lip acute, a little produced 
anreriotrg inner lin reflexed, narrow. Type — Height 14, diam. 
3.5 mm. — 55 fathoms, off Cane Borda, S. Aust., (Sir J. C. Vcrco). 
(Reg. N.u. DI0629 S. \us. ^ius.). Distribution, beach — Holdfast 
Bay, Fowlers Bay, also dredged — Beachport, 110 fathoms, Nep- 
tune Islands, 45 fathoms. Nearest ally, E. augur Apgas, but dif- 
fers in being much narrower {augur is 11 x 3.5 typically), with 
whorls slightly convex: protoconch similar to that of augur, and 
usually missing; base smooth, and not marked with the four 
equidistant spiral lines as in E, apheles Tenison-Woods, a syno- 
nym of E. augur. Named after Miss M. Roeger, an untiring Nat- 
uralist and indefatigable Officer of the Field Naturalists’ Section 
of the Royal Society of South .Australia; a foundation member of 
the Shell Club, as also of its successor, the Malacological Socictv 
of S.A. 
