i6o 
Bulletin 35 
308 
number of them so uear to living species that it is onlj' b}’ critical 
tests that we can separate them. But the recent Analogues of 
these shells re.solve themseU'es into at least two catagories, name- 
ly 1° species still living in the West Indies, and 2° species not 
now living in the West Indies. And we find the resemblances of 
the West Indian miocene shells are largelj' with Pacific and In- 
dian species rather than with We.st Indian species. Man}- again 
are akin to European miocene species, so that when we compare 
the fossil Fauna as a whole we find it very unlike the recent 
West Indian Fauna. 
It may be noted as regards this collection that litoral shells 
are absent from it. 
At different times I determined Fossils for Mr. Cunningham 
Craig. Several of these had previously occurred to me in the 
Caroni beds of Savaneta and are included in my list already pub- 
lished. To complete the list of miocene fossils so far known I 
add the names of such as were not given in that list to those of 
the Springvale Fossils now recorded. These Fossils are addition- 
Page 4 
al evidence of the miocene age of the Springvale Savaneta and- 
Montserrat beds and of the essential identity of their Fauna with 
that of the Bowden beds of Jamaica and the miocene formations 
of Haiti and Cumana. 
Additional list of Fossils from Springv.vle, &c. 
[In this list the same letters are used as in the former list in 
which, however, the letter P (page 451 line 9) should be D.] 
Molluska — I Gastropoda. 
Natica cuspidata new species S. 
Capulus efluens new species S. ^ 
Turitela tornata Guppy* S.J.H. 
apicalis Heilprin S. 
Dentalium domingen.se Sow.* H. 
Conus recognitus Guppy * S.H.J. 
