Bulletin 35 
310 
162 
Notes on the Shells with Descriptions of the 
NEW Species. 
Natica cuspidata (new Species). PI. 2. Fig. 4..^ 
u ' 
Shell moderatel}' thick, smooth with lines of growth some- 
what sinuate near the Suture-globose-depre.ssed-ovate. Spire 
pointed — Whorls five or six. Callus large stout conical, im- 
pressed with a transverse sulcus — Umbilicus a narrow deep chink. 
Largest diameter 70 mm. Height 60 mm. Like X. didyma Bol- 
ton, with a similar but more developed Callus. The shell is more 
sigaretiform. 
Natica canrena Linn. The Miocene fossil is called N. 
plicatela by Conrad. See Dali, Flor. Foss. Part i Page 364. The 
eastern Analogue is N. alapapilionis Chemn. 
Cadulus efluens (new Species). 
Shell obliquel}' spiral. Whorls rapidl}' increasing, fluted 
with longitudinal grooves separated by scarcel5"-defined rounded 
Page 6 
keels or ridges. Spire small uncinate. Aperture large. Length 
20 mm. Height 15 mm. 
The specimens are imperfect and not separable from the 
matrix, but they seem to deserve a name. The shell is similar 
in shape to C. mitrula, but it is distinguished by its larger longi- 
tudinal flutings. It recalls our old friend C. ventustus. 
Turitela tornata. Guppy —Journal Geological Society 
1866, Page 580 PI. xxvi. Fig. 12. 
T. altirata Gab. and gatunensis Gab. appear to be synonyms. 
This widely distributed and variable species has been re- 
described as F. gabii by Toula (Gatun Fossils, Tafel xxv (i) 
F. 5,). 
Conus recognitus Guppy — Journ. Geol. Soc. 1876 P. 527 
C. solidus Sow. Journ. Geol. Soc. 1850 P. 45. 
