303 
Guppy Reprint 
155 
Moore’s first List of the Haitian Fossils it was inserted as T. 
ephippium. 
Telina strophia . — Dael. 
Flor. Foss. Pt. V, P. 1019, PI. xlvii, F. ii. 
A mere fragment of shell attached to a cast, but the peculiar 
sculpture admits of the determination. 
Pectcn inaqiialis. — SowERBY . 
Journal Geol. Soc. 1850, Page 52. 
Gupp3E Journ. Geol. Soc. 1866, PI. xviii F. 6. 
Pecten deiniurgus Dal. Flor. Foss. Pt. iii, P. 718 PI. xxvi, 
F. 3. 
Page J3 
The specimen original!}" figured by me from Jamaica was a 
.small example of this species wdiich is much better figured and 
described by Dali under the name of deiniurgus. It is abundant 
and of large size at Springvale. 
My reference to comparilis (Tuomey and Holmes) is uncer- 
tain, but I am inclined to suspect that P. eccentricus Gabb be- 
longs to this species. 
Pecfen crasicardo . — Conrad. 
Arnold, California Pectens, P. 71, PI. xi, F. 5, 6 also PI. 
xvi, xvii, xviii. 
To avoid having to make a new name I take this as an ap- 
proximate identification merely. There is a large number of 
Pectens in the iniocene and their range of size and variation is so 
great that without an ample supply of specimens and access to all 
the literature it is difficult to be certain about the right name. 
The Pectens not less than certain other Molluska found in the 
Miocene beds attain a great individual as well as numerical devel- 
opment and the larger specimens assume characters different 
from those of the smaller ones. 
Corbula viminea . — Guppy. 
Journ. Geol. Soc. 1866, P. 293 PI. xviii F. ii. 
Dali, Flor. Foss. Pt. iii., P. 850. 
