GUPPY — JAMAICAN TERTIARY FOSSILS, 
7.3 
©rly, growing wider gradually until near the middle of 
the whorl, then increasing in width by the expansion of 
the outer lip and the recession of the whorl to form the 
slightly twisted pillar lip. Length about 20, breadth 
about 7 mm. 
Allied to Ov. leathesi Wood of the English Crag. It is 
nearly of the same size, but is more slender in its propor- 
tions and in some particulars is more close to Ov. spelta , 
including under that term both the fossil and recent species 
so called. 
Turritella tornata Guppy. 
Journal GeoL Soc. vol. xxii, p. 580, pi. xxvi, f. 12. 
This shell occurs also in the Miocene of Haiti and 
Trinidad. 
Conus recognitus Guppy. 
C. solidus, Sowerhy , Journ. GeoL Soc. vol vi, p. 45. 
C. recognitus, Guppy, Proc. Scient. Assoc. 1867, p. 171. 
The name solidus having been used for another Cone, I 
proposed in 1867 the name of recognitus for this species. 
Conus consolrinus Sow. PI. II, f./( t 
Sowerly , Journ. Geol. Soc, vol. vi, p. 45. 
I have referred this shell to Sowerby’s species, but if 
my determination be correct Sowerby’s description is in 
need of amendment. The zones or rather spiral ribs can 
scarcely be called granose, although they exhibit a ten- 
dency to become so towards the completion of the last 
whorl, which is usually devoid of the tubercular crowning 
of the previous whorls. 
This species was hitherto only known from Haiti, but it 
is now added to the Jamaican list. 
Pleurotoma henel'eni Sowerby, 
Journal Geol. Soc, vol. vi, p, 50, pi. x, f. 6. 
