345 
specimens are quite white, but others are of a deep bluish- 
purple in the aperture and on the columella, and the colour 
is faintly visible through the shell. The largest example is 
26 mm. long, and 16 mm. in its greatest diameter. 
This species was kindly identified by Mr. Gatliff, from 
Victorian specimens, compared with the British Museum 
type by Mr. Gabriel, with Mr. E. A. Smith’s help. 
Coralliophila rubrococcinea, Melvill and Standen. 
Coralliophila rubrococcinea, Melvill and Standen, Proc. Zool. 
Soc., Lond., 1901, p. 401, pl. 21, f. 2. Type locality.— ‘Persian 
Gulf.’ Gatliff and Gabriel, Proc. Roy. Soc., Vict., 1908, vol. 
xxi, (N.S.), part 1, p. 368, “Port Fairy and San Remo. Vic- 
toria.” : 
Port MacDonnell Beach. 
Identified by Mr. Gatliff, as in the previous species. 
Trophon columnarius, Hedley and May. 
Trophon columnarius, Hedley and May, Records Austr. Mus. 
vol. vii., No. 2, 1908, p. 121, pl. xxiv., f. 22. Type locality.100 
fathoms off Cape Pillar, Tasmania. 
Dredged in 40 fathoms off Beachport, three good (one 
identified by C. Hedley, from type in Austr. Mus.). 
Trophon molorthus, Hedley and May. 
Trophon molorthus, Hedley and May, Records Austr. Mus., 
vol. vii., No. 2, 1908, p. 122, pl. xxiv., f. 283. Type locality.—100 
fathoms, off Cape Pillar, Tasmania. 
Dredged in 150 fathoms off Beachport, five; in 200 
fathoms, five; also, in 130 fathoms off Cape Jaffa, three: all ~ 
dead shells; identified by C. Hedley, from type in Austr. 
Mus., Sydney. 
Marginella columnaria, Hedley and May. 
Marginella columnaria, Hedley and May, Records Austr. 
Mus., vol. vii., No. 2, 1908, p. 120, pl. xxiii., f£.19. Type locality. 
—100 fathoms, off Cape Pillar, Tasmania. 
Dredged in Gulf St. Vincent at depths below 25 fathoms, 
one alive, six good, ten poor; in Backstairs Passage, 22 
fathoms, five alive, and in 12, 15, 17, and 20 fathoms, eight 
dead; in 40 fathoms off Beachport, three good, three poor; 
in 45 fathoms east of Neptune Islands, one good, immature; 
in 55 fathoms north-west of Cape Borda, two good and four 
immature; and in 90 fathoms off Cape Jaffa, one very poor. 
This species seems, therefore, to live chiefly at about 20 
fathoms, and beyond 60 fathoms to be found only in poor 
condition. 
Limza parvula, sp. nov. PI. xv., f. 10 to 13. 
Shell small, thin, white; obliquely oval. Umbos central, 
inflated, projecting approximate. Hinge-margin straight; 
SS, 
rly 
