208 
the example figured, the shield “of a rich yellow ground- 
colour, with large circular or oval lighter blotches surrounded 
by wreaths of black.’’ A very large number were altogether 
destitute of the black wreaths, and had pale-yellow areas on 
the darker-yellow ground. Others had opalescent-white spots 
instead of the pale-yellow, and others again had yellow spots 
on an opalescent-white ground. 
Balch, of Boston, Massachusetts, in a paper on a new 
Labradorean species of Onchidiopsis, in the Proc. U.S. Nat. 
Mus., vol. xxxviii., No. 1761, p. 469, places Caledomiella in 
the subfamily Velutininew, of the family Lamellariide; but 
in order to locate the genus definitely in its subfamily it is 
necessary to determine whether the animal has the sexes 
separate or united, and whether it has an expiratory cleft. 
Turritella runcinata, Watson. 250 
., 1881, 
Turritella runcinata, Watson, Jour. Linn. Soc., vol. xv 
p. 217; Verco, Trans. Roy. Soc., S.A., 1910, vol. xxxiv., p. 122. 
Taken in 50 fathoms west of Eucla, 2; 75 fathoms 80 
miles west of Eucla, 3; 80 fathoms 80 miles west of Eucla, 
4; 101 fathoms 80 miles west of Eucla, 1. It may reach 
64 mm. in length by 17 mm. in width. They were all dead. 
Vermicularia flava, Verco. SOS 
Vermicularia flava, Verco, Trans. Roy. Soc., S.A., 1907, vol. 
xxxi., p. 214, fig: 1; Gatliff and Gabriel, Proc. Roy. Soc., Vic- 
tora, 1908, vol. xxi. (New Series), part 1, p. 876, ‘‘Western 
Port’’?; Hedley and May, Records Austr. Mus., 1908, vol. vii., 
p. 111, “100 fathoms, off Cape Pillar, Tasmania’; Hedley, Com- 
monwealth of Australia, Fisheries, 1911, part 1, p. 938, ‘100 
fathoms, off Cape Wiles.’’ 
Taken in 80 fathoms 80 miles west of Eucla, alive; in 
100 fathoms 90 miles west of Eucla. 
Siliquaria australis, Quoy and Gaimard. 3/2 
Siliquaria australis, Quoy and Gaimard, Voy. “Astrolabe,” 
Zool., 1834, vol. iii., p. 802; Tate and May, Proc. Linn. Soc., 
N.S.W., 1901, vol. Sao: 378, recorded for Tasmania; Menke, 
Moll. Nov. Holl., p- 10, No. 28, recorded for Western Australia ; 
Angas, Proc. Zool. Soc., 1865, p. 174 (Tenagodes), recorded for 
South Australia; Pritchard an Gatliff, Proc. Roy. Soc., Vic- 
toria, 1900, vol. xii. (New Series), part 2, p. 204, recorded for 
Victoria. 
Dredged alive in large masses of yellow sponge in 80 
fathoms 80 miles west of Eucla, and in 75 fathoms; in 100 
fathoms 90 miles west of Eucla, and in 72 fathoms 40 miles 
west of Eucla. 
