5^4. - 3 51 a Binney, Ti&n. G., and Tr/on, Geo. TV., Jr.: The complete writings or Cons tan tine Siraltz Rarinosque on recent and fossil ccnchology, N. I., Ib64 r THE COMPLETE WRITINGS OF Constaiitine Smaltz Rafinesque, ON REOEISTT & FOSSIL CONCHOLOGY. EDITED BY WM. G. BmNEY, AND GEORGE W. TRYON JR., Members of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, CO' i -D : r=\ I O = CD NEW YORK S ^^£ o BAILLIERE BROTHERS, 520 Bkoadway. S m m C3 LONDON : H. Baillieee, 219 Regent Stkeet. ^ ° PARIS : J. B. Baillieee, et Fils, Rue Hautefetjille. ^ MADRID : C. Baillt Baillieke, Calle del Principe. 1864. CONTENTS. TAGIir Preface by the Editors 5 Titles of Works containing Conchological Writings of Rafinesque 7 Complete Conchological Writings, &c f) Index of Generic and Specific Names 1)7 Plates ". PREFACE BY THE EDITORS. The greatest difficulty under which the student of American Conchology labors, is the impossibility of obtaining access to the earlier writings on the subject. To remove this difficulty, a series of Reprints was commenced several years since, by the publication of the Complete Writings of Thomas Say. The present volume offers in an equally accessible form, all the known writings of Constantine Smaltz Rafinesque. It is believed to contain a re-print of all his contributions to Recent and Fossil Conchology, and fac-similes of all his published figures. It is the result of the research of several years, and contains extracts from works whose titles are not given in any of the Bibliographies, not even the exhaustive one recently published by Carus and Engellman. It must, however, be antici- pated, that among the numerous publicatioB.s of so prolific an author, some additional -descriptions of Mollusca may yet come to light. All the works quoted, have been placed directly into the hand of the compositor, with directions to follow strictly the orthography of the original, a fact which must account for the greater part of the typographical errors which will be found in the work. 6 PREFACE BY THE EDITORS. In presenting to the public, for the first time, a complete edition of Rafinesque, we forbear to express an opinion on the differences which have unhappily arisen regarding the adoption of many of his generic and specific names. Where the very highest authorities have differed so much, it would seem presumptuous in us to make a decision. The numerous valuable writings of our' author on terrestrial and marine Mollusca (universally acknowledged as such,) together with the great interest which has been awakened in his descriptions of our Naiades, will doubtless render this volume an acceptable addition to Conchological literature. Wm. G. Binney, George W. Tryon, Jr. Philadelphia, May, 1864. LIST OP WORKS CONTAINING THE CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS OF RAFINESQUE. 1814. — Speccliio delle Scienze o Giornale Enciclopedicadi Sicilia 9 1814. — Precis des Decouvertes Somiologiques ou Zoologiques et Botaniques 11 1815. — Analyse de la Nature 12 1818. — American Monthly Magazine and Critical Review 22-23-24 1819. — Journal de Physique, de Chimie, d'Histoire Naturelle, &c 25-31 1820. — Annales Generales des Sciences Physiques 34 1820.— The Annals of Nature 64 1821. — Enumeration and Account of some Remarkable Objects, &c 6(5 1831. — Continuation of a Monograph, &c 69 1832-33. — Atlantic Journal and Friend of Knowledge, &c 88-91 1840.— The Good Book and Amenities of Nature 92-94 COMPLETE CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS OP C. S. RAFINESQUE. [From the " Specchio deUe Scienze o Giornale Eiiciclopedico di Sicilia," &c., &c. Tomo Secondo. Numero XI. Palermo. 1 Nov., 1814.] [153] Quadro dei Generi di Molluschi pteropodi del Signori Peron e Lesueur. L'0-rdine dei Pteropodi (P'eropodia) stabilito tra la classe dei Molluschi dal celebre Sign. Cuvier con i tre generi Clio, Hyalea e Pneumoderma, viene adesso accresciuto sine a 10 generi dai Signori Peron e Lesueur e diviso in 4 sezioni; eccone i caratteri essenziali. PTEROPODI. Corpo libero natante, capo distinto, delle ali, alcune volte uu involto testaceo univalve. I. Nudi e senza e tentacoli. 1. G. Flrola (Pterotrachea Forsk) 2 occhi, branchie alia base della coda, 3 ale. [154] 2. Callianira, nessun occhio, 3 ale, branchie cilifere, sopra I'ala laterale. II. Nadi e tentacolati. 3. Phyllirhoe, 2 tentacoli, una probiscide, contratibile, 2 occhi, una ala caudale. 4. Pneumoderma Cuvier, 2 tentacoli, una probiscide, nessun occMo, due ale laterali al collo, branchie lamellose. 10 RAriNESQUE'S 5. Gtio. Linn. 2 tentacoli, una proboscide, nessun occhio, due. ale lateral! al corpo, branchie retiformi sopra le ale. 6. Glaucus {Scyllea Lin.) 4 tentacoli, nessun occliio, sei o otto ale laterali digitate branchiali. III. Testacei e senza tentacoli. 7. Cleodora, 2 occhi, 2 ale laterali, besto cartilaginoso. ly. Testacei e tentacolati. 8. Gymbiilia, 2 tentacoli, una p'robiscide, 2 occhi 3 ale, testo car- tilaginoso. 9. Hyalea Lamark, 2 ale, ai lati della bocca, nessun occhio, testo convesso sopra un lato, apice tricuspidato. 10. Carinaria Lamark, 2 tentacoli, nessun occhio, testo conico compresso, dorso a doppia carena dentata, apice spirulato. Nota delV editore. lo ho accresciuto di altri 1 generi nudi, questo ordine di Anamali ; eccone i caratteri essenziali. Alia prima sezione senza tentacoli, appartengono 4 generi. 1. Hypterus, 2 occhi, una probiscide, branchie sotto la coda, un ala sotto il corpo. 2. Sarcopterus, nessun occhio, una grande ala orizontale intorno al corpo, una cresta sul capo, branchie lamellose. 3. Heteroptera, nessun occhio, molte ale branchiali non digitate ed in numero imparo, le due anterioriori contratibili. 4. Abretia, nessun occhio, molte piccole ale branchiali laterali in numero paro, non digitate, nessuna contratibile. [155] E tre generi alia seconda sezione, i tentacolati. 5. Cteniurus, 2 tentacoli corti ed immobili, 2 occhi, 2 ale bran- chiali digitate da ogni lato del corpo, un ala longitudinale pectinata da ogni lato della coda. — Oss. Vicino del genere Glocus, questo genere con i due precedenti ed il seguente devono formare una fami- glia particolare Fleuropodia. 6. Dicroptera, 2 tentacoli lunghi e mobili, nessun occhio, 2 pic- cole ale laterali alia coda. 1. Eione. Molti tentacoli foliosi intorno della bocca, nessun occhio, 4 ale intorno del corpo, e molte ale o appendici inuguali alia coda. Tutti questi generi sono del mare Mediterraneo e tirreno, fuorchfe il Gteniurus che fu ritrovato da me nel mare atlantico. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 11 [From Precis des Decouvertes Somiologiques ou Zoologiques et Botan- iques, p. 28. Palermo. 1814.] [28.] 7. Classe. Malacosia — Les MoUusques. 67. Octopus fraijedus. Antenopes cgaux, egalant presque six fois la longueur du corps, leur extremite sans su9oirs, sucoirs alternes, dos rougeatre. 68. Octopus didynamus. Antenopes inegaux, deux plus longs, egalant presque cinq fois la longueur du corps, sucoirs alterneS; dos brunatre* 69. Octopus heteropus. Antenopes a peine plus longs du corps inegaux, les deux superieurs les plus longs, su9oirs alternes, dos rougeatre. 70. Octopus ruber. Antenopes egaux, environ le double du corps, suyoirs alternes, corps entierement rouge. 71. Octopus tetradynamus. Antenopes inegaux alternativement, plus longs, egalant cinq fois la longueur du corps, su9oirs opposes, dos grisatre. 72. Octopus moschafus. Antenopes egaux, egalant quatre fois la longueur du corps, su9oirs opposes, corps blanchatre. — Obs. J'ai [29.] observe en Sicile, rien moins que G especes de ce Genre, confondues sous la designation d' Octopus vulgaris de Lamark et Montfort, j'ai nomme les autres, 0. albus. 0. niger et 0. maculatus ; 1' 0. moschatus de Lamark est mon Ozoena moschata. XYIII. Gr. ocYTHOE. 8 Antenopes, les deux superieurs ailes. interieuremeut, a su9oirs iuterieurs pedoncules, reunispar 1' aile late- ralo, aucune membrane a la base des antenopes 73. Ocythoe tuherculata. Ventre tubercule, dos lisse, antenopes de la longueur du corps, carenes exterieurement, a duex rangs de su9oirs, 8 su9oirs autour de la bouche. Obs. Mes autres nouvelles especes de la famille Sepidia sont. Sepia mucronata, Loligo Ian- ceolatsL, L. odagadium, L. todarus, Ozoena aldrovandi, Dictyethis fusca, &c. XIX. Gr. HTPTERUS. Corps gelatineux cylindrinque, bouche a 1' eitreraite d' une trompe, deux yeux, aile comprimee sous le ventre, appendice lacinie (branchiesj sous la queue. Famille Ptrachidia. 74. Hyptei us appendiculatus. Hyalin, deux appendices articu- les sous la poitrine et un sous 1' aile. 12 rafinesque's 75. Hypterus erylhrogaster. Hyalin, estomac rouge, points d' appendices articules. XX. Stephylla. Corps oblong deprime, bouche entouree d'une conronne de tentacules lacinies, foliaces, 2 appendices surla [30.] partie posterieure du Dos (branchies ?) anus posterieur a la droite. Famille Phyllidia, 76. Stephylla pallida. Dos blanchatre varie de cendre et de brun, tentacules gris, appendices bruns. 77. Stephylla lutescens. Dos jaunatre tachete de brun, tentacules noiratres, termines de blanc, appendices bruns. 78. Stephylla fasca. Brun fonce sans taches, borde de jaune tentacules et appendices noirs, bordes de blanc. XXI. G. Armina. Corps oblong deprime, bouche nue retracti- ble, flancs lamelleux, anus a la droite. — Meme famille du precedent. 79. Armina maculata. Dos roussatre tache de blanc, deux petits tentacules oboves sur la tete, corps aigu posterieurement. 80. Armina tigrina. Dos noiratre, varie de lignes ondulees blanches, point de tentacules, corps obtus posterieurement. XXII. Sarcopterus. Corps entoure d' une grande aile plane, bouche nue a une crete en dessus, branchies laterales lamelleuses. 81. Sarcopterus ruber. Entierement rouge clair, aile arrondie, entiere, corps brun superieurement. Obs. J'omets plusieurs especes Siciliennes de Laplysia, Limax, Tethys, Doris &c., et tous les Coquillages, m' appei'cevant que je commence a depasser mes limites. [From " Analyse de la Nature, ou Tableau de 1' Univers etdes Corps Orga- nises." Palerme, 1815.] Among the Helmisia or Les Yers, occur the following: [136.] III. 0. ENDOSIPHIA, Les Endosiphes. 6. Famille. DITREMIA. Les Ditremes. Fourreau, tube ou coquille a deux ouvertures aux deux extremites. 2. S. F. dentalia. Les Dentaliens. Coquille tubuleuse cal- caire. Gr. 21. Dentalium L. 22. Odorthus R. sp. do. Siphodon R. sp. do, 24. Asphalium R. 25. Nicteis R. 7. Famille. TREMONIA. Les Tremoniens. Fourreau tube ou coquille, a une seule ouverture anterieure. CONOHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 13 2. S. F. 8ERPULARIA. Les Serpulaires. Coquille tubuleuse calcaire, 'Gf. 9. Diodiphus R. 10. Serpula L- 11. Spirilum B. sp. do- 12. Filigrana E.. sp. do. 13. Polithalus R. sp. do. 14. Spirinea R. sp. do. 15- Stenotrema R. sp. do- 16. Sipho- [137.] nemus R. sp. do. IT. Alromojjsis R. sp. do. 18. Asepis R. 19. Sjm^orbis Daud. 20. Codostoma R. 21. Exai'thria R. 22. Vaginella Daud. 23. Spiroglyphis Daud. 24. Sp'irographis Yiviaui. X. 8. Ctasse. APALOSIA. Les Mollusques. Cette classe fut fondee par Cuvier qui a cru devoir lui assigner sa place immediatement apres les Poissons ; mais il suffit de comparer V organisation des Mollusques avec celle des Crustaces pour s' as- surer que ces derniers 1' out plus parfaite sous tous les rapports, et qu'ils meritent d' etre places plus pres des Animaux vertebres ; et apres eux doivent necessairement suivre les Insectes. L' appareil des articulations internes ou externes cesse entiere- ment avec la classe precedente, on n' en retrouve plus aucune ided parmi les Mollusques, et a peine quelque legere trace dans la classe suivante. Ces Animaux possedent presque toujours une enveloppe testacee calcaire ou coquille, ordinairement externe, tantot univalve unilocu- laire non tubuleuse ou multil6culaire ou spirivalve, et tantot bivalve, mais tres-rarement multivalve, quelquefois cette coquille est interne ; 1' etude de ces enveloppes porte le nom de Conchyologie, et elle est [138.] a plusieurs egards plus avancee que celle de leurs Animaux, a cause de sa facilite, quoique son importance soit bien moindre. Dans le cas des especes fossiles, il ne reste que cette depouille. Les Mollusques ont souvent une tete, quelquefois des yeux et des tentacules ; mais ils sont aussi souvent depourvus de tous ces orga- nes : ils ont tous, un ou plusieurs coeurs uniloculaires ou centres de circulation, des arteres, des veiues, du sang, des nerfs aboutissan^ a un cerveau imparfait, et presque toujours des brancliies tres-diversi- tiees, aquariennes ou aeriennes, externes ou internes ; ils ont enfin une bouche et un anus dont la situation est tres-variable. » Leur generation s' opere avec ou sans accouplement, et elle est ovipare ou gemmipare. lis habitent ordinairement les eaux, quel- quefois sur la terre : ils y rampent ordinairement, y nageut quel- quefois et sont rarement fixes. 14 rafinesque's Les principaux auteurs ont qui illustre P Apalogie apr^s Linneus, sont, Geoffroy, Adanson, Poli, Cuvier, Larnark, Muller, Bruguiere, Bosc, Montfort, Boissy, Peron . . . Je vais ausssi y contribuer pa,r mes decouvertes, dont je n' ai encore public qu' une tres-petite par- tie ailleurs, et dont je reserve les details pour un autre lieu. TABLEAU DES ORDRES. 1. Sous-Classe. CEPHADELIA. cephadeles. line tete dis- tincte, ordinairement des yeux et des tentacules ; coquille jamais bivalve. 1, Ordre, CEPHALOPODIA. Les cephalopodes. Tentacules longs servant des pieds, ordinairement plus de quatre ; ordinaire- ment un test interne ou externe uniloculaire on multilocaire, a spire mulle ou interne. [139.] II. Frdre. PTERO PODIA. Les pteropodes, Tentacules nuls ou courts, 4 an plus, une ou plusieurs nageoires ou appendices natatoires, quelouefois un test univalve externe III. Ordre. GASTEROPODIA. Les gastergpodes. Ten- tacules nuls ou courts, 4 au plus, point d' appendices natatoires, corps et dos droit, test lorsqu' il existe externe, ou interne non spirivalve, univalve ou multivalve. ly. Ordre. SPIRONOTIA. Les spironotes. Tentacules nuls ou courts, 4 au plus, point d' appendices natatoires, corps ou au moins le dos en spirale, toujours un test externe univalve, unilo- culaire, spirivalve a spire saillante ou externe. 2. Sous-Classe. ACEPHALIA, Les acephales. Point de tete et point d' yeux, ordinairement une coquille bivalve. y. Ordre. BiyALyjA. Les bivalves. Une coquille bivalve, point de tentacules. yi. Ordre. POLETERIA. Les poleteres. Des tentacules ou test multivalve ou corps nu sans coquille. TABLEAU DES FAMILLES ET DES GENRES. L 0. CEPHALOPODIA. Les Cephalopodes, 1. Sous-Ordre. ANTEPEDIA. hes Antepe les. Corps nu a test interne, ou externe, jamais multiloculaire, antenopes ou tenta- cules en nombre determine, deux yeux, bouche en bee. 1. Famille. OCTOPIA. Les Octopiens. Corps nu sans test interne ni externe, huit antenopes conformes. G. 1. Oclopus ham. 2. Ozoena R. sp. do. 3. Tigrias R. sp. do. Ocythoe R. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. - 15 2. Famille. SEPHINIA. Les Sephiens. Corps renfermant interieurement un test ou lame, huit on dix anteaopes, dont deux de [140] forme differeate. G. 1. Sepia L. Lam. 2. Loligo Lam. 3. Sephinia R. 4. Todarus R. 5. Dyctiethis R. 6" Anthrona- cus. R. 3. Famille. ARGOXAUTEA. Les Argonautiens. Corps ren- ferme dans un test externe et uniloculaire. G. L Argonauta Lam 2. Cymbium R. sp. do. 3. Nauticon R. sp. do. 2. Sous-Ordre. polarnaxia. Les Polarnaxes- Constament un test externe ou interne et multiloculaire, tentacules souvent nombreux, soavent point d' yeux. 4. Famille. NAUTILIA. Les Nautiliens. Test externe, -k spire interne soudee, ordinairement tentacules nombreux, G. 1. Nautilus L. Lam. 2. Oehalus R. sp. do. 3. Orbulites Lam. 4. Ammonites Brug. 5. Cytonotus R. sp. do. 6. Ceramus R. Ammonoceratites Lam. ' 7, Planulites Lam. 8. Baculites Lam ? 9. Turrilites Lam ? 5. Famille. SFIRULARIA. Les Spirulaires. Test externe en spirale libre ou sans spire, tentacules souvent determines. G. L Spirula Lam. 2. Spironites Lam. 3. Lituolites Lam. 4. Belem- nita Lam. 5. Closterita R. sp. do. 6. Ropalita R. sp. do. 7. Campytus R. sp.do. 8. Fachynus R. Mippurites Lam. Cornuco- piaThomson. ^. Orthocera IjSbm. 10. O&Zz'czYws R. sp. do. 11. Oblongites R. sp. do. 6. Famille. NTJMMULITIA. Les Nummulitiens. Test plane, ordinairement interne ! a spire nulle ou concentrique. G. 1. Num- mulites Lam. 2. Gumerina R. sp. do. 3. Discolita R sp. do. 4. Lenticulina Lam. 5. Discorhitus Lam. 6. Rotalites Lam. 7. Gyrogonites Lam. 8. Miliolites Lam 9. Renulites Lam. IL 0. PTEROPODIA. Les Pteropodes. 7. Famille. HYALINEA. Les Hyaliens. Un test externe, [141] deux ou trois ailes anterieures. G. 1. Hyalea Bosc. 2. Aulisa R. sp. do. 3. Thoena R. sp. do. 4. Garinaria Lara. 5. Gymbulia Per. 6. Gleodora Per. 8. Famille. OLIGOPTERIA. Les Oligopteres. Corps nu, deuxou'un petit nombre de nageoires ordinairement anterieures, jamais situees lateralement par paires. 16 RAFINESQUE'8 1. S. F. FiROLiNiA. Les Firoliens. Tete sans tentacules. G. 1. Pterotrachea Forsk. 2. Firola R. sp. do. 3. Eypterus R. 4. Callianira Per. 5. Sarcopterus R. 2. S. F. CLIONIDIA. Les Glionides. Tete tentaculee. G. 6. Glione R. Clio Brown. 7- Amphirea R. sp. do. 8. Pneumoder- ma Cuv. 9. Phylliroe Per. 10. Dicroptera R. 9. Famine. PLEUROPTERIA. Les Pleuropteres. Corps et, plusieurs nageoires ou appendices laterales et longitudiuales situees par paires. 1. S. F. LERNEiDiA. L.QS Le7'neides. Des appendices posteriure- ment. G. 1. Lernea L. 2. Dotona R. sp. do. 3. Ilelanipipa R. sp. do. 4. Iphitus R. sp. do. 5. Zeuxonia R. sp. do. G. CZy- tiana R. sp. do. 7. Eione R. 2. S. F. PLEUROPiA. Les Pleuropiens. Point d' appendices posterieurement. G. 8 Blephalum R. 9. Triton L. ? 10. Pleii- ropus R. Scyllea L. Glaucus Lam. 11. Gomphodelis R. sp. do. 12 Gteniurus R. 13. Ahretia R. 14. Heteroptera R. 15. .Sip- pothoe R. IIL 0. GASTEROPODIA. Les Gasteropodes. 10. Famille. LIMAXIA. Les Limaxiens. Point de test ni externe ni interne. 1. S. F. TETHYDiA. Lcs Tethydieus. Point de tentacules. G. [142i 1 Tethys L. 2. Nereus R. 3. Peribea R. 4. Agenor R. ^cercs Cuv. 5. ^rmtna R. 2. S. F. PHYLLiDiNiA. Les Phyllidiens. Deux tentacules, branchies lamelleuses. G. 6. Enipeus R. 7. Phyllidia Cuv. 8. Pleurobranchus Lam. 9. Eolia Cuv. 3 S- F. DORiDiA. Les Doridiens. Deux tentacules, brancbies ni lamelleuses ni cacbees. G. 10. Doris L. 11. Cydippa R. sp. do. 12. Stephylla R. 13 Eitphurus R. Tritonia Lam. 14. Paralus R. sp. do. 15. Pherusa R. 4. S. F. ONCHiDiA. hes Onchidiens. Deux tentacules, branchi- es cachees peu apparentes. G. 16. Onchidium Lam- 17. Dicla- dus R. 18. Amphrisus R. 5. S. F. LiMACiDiA. Les Limacides. Quatre tentacules, bran- chies cachees peu apparentes. G. 19. Limax R. 20. Limicias R. sp. do 21. Parmacella Lam. ? 11. Famille. LAPLYSIjSTIA. Les Laplysiens. Un test in- terne dorsal convert par la peau. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. It 1. S. F. TETRACEA. Les Tetraces. Quatre tentacules. G. 1. Laplysia L. 2. Sympterus R. 3. Dolahella Lam. 2. S. F. siGARETiA. Les. Sigaretins. Deux tentacules. G 4. Tlieoris R. 5. Sigaretus Lam. 6. Fhoroneus R.. 3. S. F. BULLiNiTiA. Les Bullinides. Point de tentacules. G. 7. Bullinia R. BuUea Lam. 8. Lajjhyra R. 12. Famine. PATELLARIA. Les Patellaires. Un test ex- terne dorsal et univalve. 1. S. F. HALiOTiDiA. Les Haliotides. Test jamais conique, a base legerement contournee ou un pen en spire. G. 1. Bullaria R. Bulla L. 2. Lignaria R. 3. Hipponea R 4. Polyiectus R. 5. Conchidus R. Concholepas Lam. 6. Haliotis L. 1. Stoma- [143] truncata, etc. 54. Apleurotis. (Biv. foss.) Different des genres T(?re6?-aiMZa et Magas, par valves inequilatcrales, obovales ou oblongues (non transversales,) strides, la grande valve plus longue a la base, si ou- verture arrondie, petite, et a une aile laterale. — Deux especes de couches calcaires des chutes de I'Ohio, etc. A. pectenoides et A. pusilla. 55. Notrema. (Trivalve ? fluviatile.) Test semi-trivalve ? — Yalves inegales. Grande valve patelliforme, arrondie, convexe [428] perforee au centre. Seconde valve tres-petite, pl&ne, laterale en dessous. Opercule ou troisieme valve ! couvrantl'ouverture centrale supcrieure, a charniere. Animal mutique, se fixant comme les Pa- telles, tete sortant par I'ouverture superieure, aloagee, tronquee, a 2 yeux sessiles. — Ce genre contient une seule espece bien singuliere, c'est la premiere espece vivante fluviatile approchans de la famille des Terebratules, qui soit, connue. N. patelloides. Grande valve ;i sillons concentriques, croises par des sillons obliques, valve inferi- eure obovale, incquilaterale. Get animal vit sur les rochers de I'Ohio inferieur, comme les Patelles. CONCHOtOaiCAL WRITINGS, 31 56. S ACONITES. (Mollusque fossile.) Different des genres ^scz- dia et Sachondrus (A. saccata, Auct.) par corps a una seuleouver- ture, suspendu dans un sac, interieur rayonnant a axe central. — - Animal bien singulier de la famille des Ascidites S. granularis. Corps oblong, obtus, amorplie, granuleux, ainsi que I'enveloppe ex- terieure. II se trouve souvent amasse, mais separe, dans le gres cal- caire pres de Lexington. [From "Journal de Physique, de Chhnie, d'Histoire Naturelle, etc." Tome LXXXIX. Paris, August, 1819. [150] DESCRIPTIONS. De onze Genres nouveaux de Mollusques, publies en 1814, Par C. S. RAFINESQUE, Professeur de Botanique et d'Histoire naturelle dans VUniversite de Lexington. (Note du Redacteur.) Dans une Lettre qu'il- nous a fait I'hon- neur de nous ecrire de Philadelphie, en date du 15 mai de cette annee, M. Rafinesque nous dit : " Oorame le 12e et dernier nuraero de mon Journal encyclopedique de la Sicile n'existe pas a Paris, et qu'il a ete presque entierement detruit dans les deux naufrages successifs que j'ai eprouves, je vous envoie les caracteres de onze genres de Mollusques et de Polypes, parmi les 36 genres nouveaux qu'il contient, en vous priantde vouloir bien lespublier denouveau." C'est ce que nous faisons avec le plus grand plaisir, quoique nous soyons obliges de convenir que pour vouloir peut-etre suivre avec trop de rigueur, ce qu'il appelle les prineipes linneens de nomencla- ture, M. Rafinesque nous semble etre tombe dans un grave incon- venient, qui consiste a donner si pen de developpemens a ses carac- teres generiques et specifiques, qu'il et fort difficile de se faire une [151] juste idee des animaux dont il parle, et par consequent de savoir s'ils sont nouvellement mentiones ou non. Nous croyons done devoir ne pas raeriter les reproches qu'il nous fait dans un autre endroit de sa Lettre, quand il dit a I'Ecole francoise tout entiere : "II est bien a regretter que vous oubliiez entierement en France les prineipes de nomenclature et de description de Linne (je ne parle pas de son systeme sexuel), et qu'au lieude poursuivre le beau plan trace dans le Systema naturae, vous noyiez les connoissances naturel- 32 katinesque's les dans des details accessoires ou etrangers, et que vous negligiez de nous faire connoitre toutes les especes connues ; en sorte que les observateurs etrangers ne savent tres-souvent a quoi s'en tenir. Tantot ils craignent de publier leurs decouvertes qu'ils s'imaginent etre €n partie connues ; ou s'ils sent plus hardis, ils ne peuvent echappera un autre inconvenient, qui est de decrire comme nouvelles des especes qui ne le sont pas. Mais la faute en est a vous autres, qui ne voulez (ou ne savez) pas nous donner des synopsis generaux de toutes les especes connues en zoologie, eomme en Botanique ; Roemer et Decandolle vous en montrent Pexemple." Mais sans relever cette comparaison, parce qu'il est beaucoup plus difficile de conserver toutes les especes en Zoologie qu'en Botanique, ou I'on pent successivement les voir et les comparer dans les herbiers, la raison pour laquelle aucun zoologiste n'a encore ose essayer de don- ner un Systema animalium, ne tiendroit-elle pas beaucoup plus a ce que plusieurs personnes abusant de ce qu'elles nomment a tort systeme linneen, se bornant a ne comparer que les especes qu'elles ont sous les yeux, n'etablissent leurs genres et leurs especes que d'une maniere trop breve et trop peu comparative, et par conse- quent incomplete ? II est presque impossible a un homme qui voud- roit faire un peu mieux que I'utile Gmelin, d'employer ces materiaux mal prepares, a un edifi.ce un peu solide. Et les materiaux que nous offre M. Rafinesque ne sont-ils pas un peu dans ce cas ? c'est ce qui nous semble malheureusement trop vrai pour les ouvrages que nous connoissons de ce zele zoologiste, auquel, sans aucun doute, la science doit deja beaucoup, mais a qui elle devroit bien d'avantage s'il voul- oit, reflechissant que lorsque Linnaeus etablissoit un genre sur un animal ou un vegetal nouveau, il commen9oit par le decrire com- pletement dans quelques dissertations, modifier un peu la rigueur de ses principes linneens, par I'admission de quelques-uns de ceux de I'Ecole fran9oise, dont nous lui rappellerons ici les principaux : [152] quand on caracterise un genre de Mammiferes, on doit surtout faire la plus grande attention au systeme dentaire en totalite ; d'oiseaux, au bee et surtout au sternum et a ses annexes ; de reptiles, de poissons, aux dents, a I'ouverture des branchies, -a la composition de I'opcrcule et a la forme de la queue ; de MoUusques, a la position, la forme, la nature, des organes de la respiration, la forme symetrique ou non de la coquille, etc. ; desinsectes, au nombre des articulations du corps et de ses differentes parties, au nombre, a la forme, a I'usage CONOnOLOaiCAL WRITINGS. 33 de lenrs appendices des sens, de la mastication et de la respiration ; et enfin dans les actinozoaires, a la forme generale, la nature de I'enveloppe, au nombre et a la structure des tentacules, etc. ; sll vouloit surtout, en peu de mots, rapprocher le nouveau corps organ- ise, qu'il desire signaler d'un autre parfaitement connu, en donnant les differences avec plus de details qu'il ne fait, peut-etre les travaux de M. Rafinesque, que nous avons ete les premiers a faire connoitre en France, seroient-ils plus generalement repandus et par consequent plus utiles. Genre 2. Opiptera. (Mollusque.) Corps nageaut, deprime, sans tete ; une grande aile horizontale posterieurement ; deux longs ten- tacules inegaux, non retractiles anterieurement ; la bouche entre eux. — II differe des Mollusques pteropodes par le manque de tete et de branchies. — 1 Espece 0. hicolor ; hyalin, aile rougeatre, longueur 2 pouces.* Genre 4. Oxynoe, (Mollusque.) Corps rampant, a grande coquille dorsale exterieure, pulliforme, a spire simple ; ventre ou pied etroit a branchies marginales, strides transversalement ; raanteau elargi en 2 ailes laterales, 2 tentacules non retractiles. — Different du genre Sigaretus par la coquille exterieure, etc. 1 0. olivacea. Olivatre, elliptique ; tentacules saillans, obtus. Coquille a sommet obtus, evasce.* Genre 5. Tylodina. (Mollusque.) Corps rampant, a petite coquille dorsale exterieure, membraneuse, sans spire, ovale, a pointe calleuse, palliliforme. 4 tentacules, les 2 posterieurs eloigues et plus [153] grands, branchies dorsales sous la coquille a droite, anus a la droite du cou. — T. punctulata, pointille de brun, tentacules obtus ; coquille lisse. * Quo. que nous ne pnissions guere aire a quel gn-ups de Mollusques appartient cet animal, nous pouvons assurer quil est fort douteux, que les tentacules soient inegaux. *Le genre Sigaret dont M. Rafinesque rapproche ce genre, en differe beaucoup par la situ.ation et la lorme des branchies qui sent omposees de deux peignes inegaux places au-dessus de la racine da dos. c 34 rafinesque's [From the 13th Livraison of the Fifth Volume, of the Annales Gi'nC rales de& Sciences Physiques, Bruxelles. Sept. 1830, page 287. The extra copies of this paper, which are usually met with, have a different folio from the original, page 21 corresponding with page 287 of the latter. A reprint of the text and plates of this paper was published in Chenu's Bibliothtque Conchyliologique, Paris, 1845. A translation without the plates was also published by Mr. Poulson, Philadelphia, 1832. ] [287] monographie des coquilles bivalves fluviatiles de la kiviere Ohio, contenant douze genres et soixante-huit especes. Par M. C. S. RAFINESQUE, Professeur de hotanique et d^histoire naturelle d. V Universite Transylvane de Lexington. Les nombreuses coquilles fluviatiles et terrestres de I'iaterieur de I'Amerique septentrionale u'avaient pas encore ete observees et deerites quand j'eatreprisce travail en 1818 et 1819. Je fussurpris et charrae de decouvrir qu'elles etaient presque toutes des especes nouvelles, et totalement differentes de celles qui habitent les terres atlantiques ; en sorte qu'il parait que la chaine des montagnes Alleghany, qui separe les deux contrees, forme aussi une ligne de demarcation entre les poissons et les coquilles des eaux du bassin de I'Ohio, et ceax des eaux qui aboutissent a I'Ocean Atlantique. Quoique bien eloigne d'avoir epuise I'etude des coquilles de cette contree, noanmoins j'y ai deja observe, recueilli et figure environ 180 especes, dont environ 10 univalves fluviatiles, 50 univalves terrestres et 60 bivalves fluviatiles. Ce sont ces dernieres que je vais faire connaitre dans cette monographic. Les univalves seront deerites ailleurs ; j'en ai deja public plusieurs et particulierement les novueaux genres dans mon Prodrome des animaux nouveaux de I'Amerique septentrionale. La majeure partie des bivalves de I'Ohio, se trouve dans laplupart des rivieres qui s'y jettent, telles que le Kentucky, Cumberland, Tennessee, Wabash, Miami, Green, Scioto, Licking, Muskingum, Kenhaway, etc. dont plusieurs sont des rivieres considerables de 5 a [288] 800 milles de cours (ou 2 a 300 lieues). II reste a verifier si elles sont communes a tout le bassin du Mississipi, et au Missouri, Ar- kanzas, etc. Je suis deja certain que quelques-unes s'y trouvent, et 11 me parait probable que les coquilles de cet immense bassin doivent CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 35 etre analogues, quoique plusieurs especes particulibres puissent etre par la suite decouvertes dans les grandes branches occidentales et meridionales. Parrai les bivalves de I'Ohio, la plupart des espfeces appartiennent au seul genre Unio, tel qu'il est enonce. Ua nombre aussi consid- erable d'especes, qui quadruple tout d'un coup ce genre, et qui offre des anomalies infinies de forme et de structure, est un fait trfes-re- marquable, qui m'a occasionne des doutes sur 1' enonciation des caracteres. Frappe d'abord par quelques differences dans les caracteres des mollusques quihabitent les coquilles de I'Ohio, j'avais cru y entrevoir une nouvelle famille ou un nouveau genre de bivalves, que je me proposals de nommer Potamila. Convaincu par la suite que, nonobstant les legeres differences dans I'animal, les coquilles correspondaient entierement au caractere generique de VUnio, mais en offrant des caracteres secondaires bien tranches, tels que des coquilles transversales ou longitudinales, k formes elliptiques, triangulaires, carrees obovalves, arrondies, etc. et a dent lamellaire horizontale, oblique, verticale, droite, courbe, flexueuse, etc., je pro- posal de les diviser en 8 sous-genres, dans mon Prodrome de 10 nouveaux genres. Depuis lors, ayant accru mes especes et verifi6 leurs caracteres, il me semble convenable d'en former plusieurs genres et sous-genres ; mais pour complaire aux naturalistes, qui hesitent dans Tadoption des changemens de nomenclature que les decouvertes necessitent, je donnerai le nom d^Un'io en second lieu, a toutes mes nouvelles especes, en leur observant qu'en les admettant toutes dans le genre Unio, qui par la deviendra compose de plus de 70 especes, il faudrait repeter dans I'enonciation des caracteres specifiques, celui des caracteres de mes nouveaux genres, ce qui rendrait la definition des especes longue et prolixe. [289] Parnii les Unio de PAmerique septentrionale deja mentionnes par les anteurs, il y en a un decouvert par Michaux fils, dans I'Ohio, et nom me U. Ohiensis dans son voyage ; mais comn>e il n'y est pas decrit, je ne puis pas le rapporter a aucune de mes especes : d'ail- leurs le nom d^OMensis est tres-peu convenable, et il est singulier que Michaux n'ait pu recueillir qu'une espece dans I'Ohio, ou il en existe plus de 50 I L'C/". caroliana de Bosc, est decrite incomplfete- ment ; cependant je presume qu'elle n'est indentique avec aucune espece de I'Ohio. Parmi les nouvelles especes di'Unio decrites par 36 rafinesque's Say dans Tarticle Conchology du dictionnaire de Nicholson, il y en a 4 qui sent de I'Oiiio : V. crassus, U. alatus, U. ovatus et U. cylindricus ; la description du premier comprend evidemment plusieurs especes, mal iVpropos confondues. Des autres bivalves de I'Ohio appartiennent aux genres Alasmo- don, Cyclas et Notrema, et renferment tres-peu d'especes. Toutes ces coquilles sont a peine mangeables ; elles ont un goiit extremement fade et insipide, en sorte qu'on les neglige ; cependant quelques-unes des grandes especes ont un moUusque appetissant ; la seule maniere de rendre ces mollusques propres a la table, consiste a les laisser tremper dans du vinaigre pendant un certain temps ; on pent ensuite les frire ou les confire au vinaigre. Plusieurs poissons s'en nourrissentet suYtoutV Ambloclongrunniens. Les herons aussi les mangent a defaut de poisson, et les cochons en sont tres-friands ; on les voit tressouvent aller en troupe dans les rivieres a leur recherche, et ils les mangent avidemeut, nonobstant I'epaisse et dure coquille de plusieurs especes. Les noms vulgaires du pays sont pen varies ; on les confond tons sous les noms de muscles, dames, box-shells, snuff-box, etc. Plusieurs especes sont ornee.s de couleurs tres-brilliantes dans I'interieur, offrent plusieurs nuances de pourpre, violet, cuivre, nacre, dore, irise, etc. quoique leur exterieur soit constamment reconvert [290] par un epiderme de couleur foncee ou noire, brune, chataigne, rousse, olivatre, etc. Plusieurs produisent des perles ou excroissances perlees et colorees, dont quelques-unes sont tres-belles ; on pourrait meme tirer parti de leur nacre variee. Dans certains lieux, hors de la region calcaire, on les ramasse pour taire de la chaux. Le mol- lusque est communement blanc, mais quelquefois jaune ou safrane. 11 vit tres-long-temps. Pamille. Pediferia. Les Pediferes. Bivalve equivalve inequilaterale. Mollusque a grand pied corn- prime, tendineux non byssifere ; deux siphons tres-courts, ou rem- places par deux ouvertures ; anus sous le .ligament ; charniere dentee ou lamellee. Cette famille comprend toutes les bivalves de' I'Ohio, tels que les genres Unio, Anodonta, etc. des auteurs, ainsi qu^ mes nouveaux genres demembres deVUnio. Je la divise en plusieui's sous-families, dont 5 habitent dans I'Ohio. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. St I. Sous-famille. Uniodia. Les TJniadeg. Coquille transverse. Dent bilobee anterieure. Dent lamellaire posterienre, horizontale ou oblique. Sommets un pen obliques. Rides concentriques ou zonales. I"- Genre. TJnio. Mulette. Coquille elliptique. Ligament droit. Dent bilobee communement sillonnee. Dent lamellaire horizontale, souvent droite, jamais flexueuse. Axe variable. Contour marginal, presque toujours epaissi. Trois impressions museulaires. Mollusque a grand manteau bilobe, "non frange ; siphons a peine saillans, una appendice plate bilamel- laire a cote de chaque siphon ; branchies striees, en forme de second manteau interieur et bilobe. Cast ainsi que je definis le groupe auquel je laisse le nom d^Unio, parce qu'il parait etre le plus nombreux, et se rapprocher de celui a qui I'on a donne ce nom en Europe ; cependant il parait que s'ils [291] sont identiquement congeneres, on aurait du observer les appendices lamellairas des siphons etles branchias striees mantelliformes. Beau- coup d'especes out, outre les trois impressions museulaires, una fossule musculaire ;i I'extremite de la dent lamellaire, qui, quoique quelquefois confluente avec I'imprassion solitaire de ce cote, en est souvent distincte. Si ce genre differe par I'animal, des Unio europeens, il faudra le nommer Elliptio, nom que j'ai applique a un de ses sous genres. Je le divise en 4 sous-genres. l'""- Sous-genre. Elliptio. Ellipte. Test elliptique. Axe extra-medial. Dent sillonnee. Contour epaissi. Ligament corne. Dent lamellaire droite. 1. Espece. iJ^io mgrra (Elliptio nigra), Muletta noire. PI. lxxx, fig. 1, 2, 3 et 4.* Ovale-elliptique, pau bombee, a legere troncature angulaire posterieuremeut ; test epais ; epiderme noiratre ; nacre rosee ; dent lamellaire epaisse, obtuse, rides legeres. Longueur 9-15. Diametre 6-15. Axe 2-5 de la largeur. C'est une des grandes especes de I'Ohia, puisqu'elle parviant quelquefois a 6 pouces de largeur. Sa nacre est belle, quelquefois iridescente, les impressions le sont toujours. La fos&ule existe dis- *Lesdessms nous ayant ete envoyes non colories et les coquUles ne se trouvant pas a aotre disposition, nous n'avons pu en rendre lea coulenrs sur les planches, et le lythographe a du s'astreindre au simple role de copiste. 38 ' rafinesque's tinctement. Voiei la forme de sa charniere et cette description servira pour toutes les autres especes. Dent bilobee anterieure, epaisse, triquetre, sillonnee : lobes inegaux, I'anterieur plus petit, dans la valve droite, I'oppose dans la gauche. Dent laraellaire sim- ple dans la valve gauche. Ligament dur presque calcaire, corne ex- terieuremcnt et convexe. Deux impressions musculaires inegales sous la dent bilobee, la seconde ou inferieure plus petite. La fossule formant une espece de quatrieme impression musculaire entre le [292] bout de la dent lamellaire et son impression qui en est detachee. Sommet des valves a epiderme use, et souvent aussi le test. Ce caractere a ete employe par les Conchjologistes comrae specifique ; mais a tort, car il existe dans toutes les especes, hormis U Jiiva, U. viridis, et les coquilles naissantes ; il est purement accidentel et secondaire, mais inherent a leur maniere de vivre. En ouvrant et fermant ses valves, I'animal est contraint de les faire frotter contra le sable ou le gravier dans lesquels il vit, et 11 en use graduellement le sommet ; s'il vit dans la boue, ce sommet s'use trl'S-lentement, tandis que parmi les pierres toute la surface des valves devient graduellement usee et cariee. Le contour du bord marginal est au contraire tres-entier, et ferme herraetiqueraent par une prolongation de Tepiderme membraneux et mobile, que I'animal forme par une exsudation de son pied. Aucnne partie de la coquille n'est brilliante, hormis dans les vieux individus. Pour completer la connaissanee generale de ces animaux, je vais donner la description et la figure du mollusque de VU. nigra. Tous les animaux de cette famille n'offrent que de legeres diflfer- ences de couleurs, dimensions et proportions. Corps blanc ou un peu incarnat (fig. 4). Manteau mince, lisse, tapissant les valves, bilobe et echancre pos'erieurement, sans franges. Second manteau intcrieur, branchial, strie obliquement, mince, bilobe posterieurement, beaucoup moindre que I'exterieur, et enveloppant le pied. Pied comprime, musculeux, coriace, oblong, dilatable. Bouche anterieure. Anus posterieur, a I'extremito du ligament. Siphons anterieurs lateraux ; egaux, un de chaque cotd, derriere la bouche, en forme de tubercule perfore ; et encore plus en arriere, egalement de chaque cote, une appendice oilamellaire-obtus, a lames inegales, plates, ovales ou oblongues : 1 interieure plus grande. Ce sont apparemment les organes de la generation. D'apres cette deg- CONCHOLOaiCAL WRITINGS. 39 criptioa exacte, et que j'ai vcrifiee sur plus de 20 especes et 300 [293] individus, oa verra qu'il y a une difference notable entre ces raollus- ques et ceux des Unio europeens tels qu'ils sout docrits par les auteurs et notammeut par Ferussac, (Essai Vane mHhode conchy- ologiqite) qui se pique d'une scrupuleuse exactitude dans I'enoncia- tion des moUusques fluviatiles. Ces animaux vivent s\ la surface du lit des rivieres, libres et situes de toates les manieres, sur le eoto ou verticalement avee I'ouverture en haut, en has ou oblique. lis savent au besoin s'enfoncer dans le sable ou la terre, particuliereraeat en hiver et meme en ete dans les petites rivieres snjettes a des dessechemens auxquels ils resistentfort bien. Ils ont un mouvement progressif tres lent, a I'aide de leur pied qui sillonne lentement le terrain. Ils sont hermaphrodites et multiplient beaucoup, Leurs oeufs sont tres-petits, glaireux,.souvent jaunes. Plasieurs jeunes coquilles cclosent dans la coquille de leur mere. Cette espece a deux varieties. Var. 1. Fasca. Epiderme brun foncc ; nacre pale. Yar. 2. Ilaculata. A taches brunes ; nacre presque blanche. 2. Espece. ?7/iio crassa (Elliptio erassa). Mulette epaisse. U. 'crassus. Say Conch. Tab. 1, fig. 8, esp. 1. EUiptique ; peu bomboe ; test tres-cpais ; epidermo brun ; nacre blanche; dent larnellairecpasse, obtuse; rides marquantes. Longueur 2-3, diaraetre 1-3, axe l-fi de la largeur. Celte espece est figuree par M. Say sous ce nom ; raais sa des- cription, ou, de son propre avcu, il confond plusieurs especes, ne vaut rien. Le test est ici encore plus opais que dans la precedente : du reste, elle lui resserable beaucoup; la principale difference cojisiste dans I'axe plus lateral et le dofaut u'inclinaison posterieure. Largeur de 4 a 5 ponces. 3. Espece. Unio viridis (Ellipiio viridis). Mulette verte. Ellipiique, tronquee obliquement posterieurement, peu borabee ; test peu epais, sommets a rides flexueuses ; epiderme lisse, vert- [294] olivatie ; nacre un peu bleuatre ; dent bilobee compriinee, crcnelee, decurrente. Longueur 5-9, diametre Y-16, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Var. L Radiala. Radiee de jaune pale. Yar. 2. Fuscata. Epidemic brun-olivatre. Petite espeee, de la longueur d'un pouce et demi au plus. Rare 40 iiafinesque'& dans I'Ohio, pins commune dans le Kentuky et les petites rivieres adjacentes. Elle a rarement les sommets uses, car lis sont epaissis par des rides flexueuses, remarquables puisque le reste de la coquille est lisse. La dent bilobee est etroite et en devient creneloe, au lieu de sillonnee. Troncature oblique, convexe; impressions peu marquees; fossule nulle ; dent lamellaire etroite. 4. Espece. Unio fasciata (EUiptio fasciata). Mulette fasciee. Elliptique bombee ; test peu epais ; epiderme peu rugneux, oliva- tre, orne de rayons bruns ; nacre bleuatre ; dent bilobee rugueuse, divariquee ; dent lamellaire carenee. Longueur 2-3, diametre 1-2, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Tar. 1. Nigrofasciata. Raies noires. Tar. 2. Alternata. Yerdatre, a rayons vert-noiratres, alterna- tivement plus larges et plus etroite. Var. '3. Cuprea. Cuivrce a raies olivatres ; nacre blanche- cuivree. Jolie espece qui se rapproche de VO. ochraceus de Say. Ordi- nairement petite, cependant j'en ai vu de plus de 8 pouces de large. Dans rOhio et les rivieres Alleghany, Muskingum, Kentuky, Salt, Green, etc. Impressions peu marquees ; fossule profonde. Obs. L'on doitprobablement rapporter :i ce sous-genre les especes suivantes des auteurs, et peut-etre quelqu'autres encore. Unio Garoliniana de Bosc. Unio 2^licata? de Lesueur. Du lac Erie. Var. d'?7. crassa Say. Unio jmrpurea, de Say. tab. 3, fig. 1, De Pensylvanie. [295] Unio aurata, N, Esp. de la riviere Hudson. Elle est elliptique avec la partie posterieure tronquee obliquement ; test peu epaia ; epiderme brun, noiratre, olivatre, dore ; dent petite, rugueuse. Longueur 4-'!, diametre 2-Y, axe 1-4 de largeur. Unio pictorum, etc., etc., etc. 2"'^- Sous-genre. Leptodea. Leptode. Dent bilobee entiere et lisse : celle de la valve droite simple. Contour non-epaissi. Ligament membraneux. Dent lamellaire legerement courbee. 5. Espece. C7moZep/ofZon (EUiptio leptodon.) Mulette leptode. PI. Lxxx, fig. 5, 6 et 7. Elliptique tres-comprimce attenuee posterieurement ; test miBce CONCHOLOGIOAL WRITINGS. 41 et fragile un peu rugueux ; epiderme brunatre ; nacre violacee ; dent biolbee petite, obtuse, lisse, tuberculiforme ; dent lamellaire mince et longue. Longueur 1-2, diametre 1-6, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Assez commune dans les parties inferieures de I'Obio, ordinaire- ment petite, car son test est si fragile, qu'elle devient aisement la proie de ses ennemis : cependant elle parvient quelquefois a 3 pou- ces de largeur. Les impressions sont peu apparentes fossule apparente confluente. Animal blanchatre. Var. 1. Olivacea. Epiderme olivatre. Yar. 2. Semi-radiata. Olivatre a demi-rayons bruns. 6. Espece. Uniofragilis (Elliptic fragilis.) Mulette fragile. Elliptique, un peu dilatee posterieurement ; test tres-mince et fra- gile, presque lisse ; epiderme olivatre ; nacre bleuatre ; dent bilobee lisse, comprimee ; dent lamellaire eourte. Longueur 2-3, diametre 1-3, axe 1-3 de la longueur. YsiY.fuscata. Brun-roussatre exterieurement. Cette espece ressemble beaucoup a la precedente ; mais elle en differe par sa forme dilatee, au lieu d'etre attenuee ; peu comprimee, bombee, surface presque lisse, etc. Les sommets ne sont pas appa- rens. L'animal est jaunatre. Largeur environ deux ponces. Ces deux especes ressemblent assez exterieurement aux U. viridis, U. [296] fasciata, U. aurata et JJ. nasuta, etc., qui ont aussi la coquille fragile ; mais ils s'en distinguent aisement par leurs dents bien diffe- rentes ; elles sont lisses, avec la lame un peu courbee, etc. Y. Espece. Unto nervosa (EUiptio nervosa). Mulette nerveuse. PI. Lxxx, fig. 8, 9 et 10. Elliptique, plus large posterieurement ; test assez mince, convert de nervures flexueuses, concentriques, vermiculaires, bords ondules ; epiderme brun ; nacre, bleuatre. Longueur 2-3, diametre 2-5, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Espece rare et bien distincte. Je I'ai trouvee aux rapides de POhio. Largeur un pouce et demi. Les dents bilobees sont petites, tuberculiformes ; la dent lamellaire etroite courbe, avec les impres- sions peu apparentes ; le bord marginal est un peu epaissi et ondule ou erode. 3me. Sous-genre Aximedia. Axim('^de. Dent lamellaire un peu courbe ; axe presque medial ; valves presqu'equilaterales. 42 rafinesque's 8. Espece. Unio elliptica (Elliptio elliptica). Mulette elliptiqu-e. Elliptique, partie posterieure angulaire ; test epais, presque lisse , epiderme brun-chatain ; nacre pale, violacee ; dent bilobee ridee, obtuse: lame obtuse, epaisse. Longueur 3-4, diametre, 3-8, axe 7-16 de la largeur. Rare ; vue pres de Louisville et de Maysville. Largeur environ deux pouces. Impressions profondes. Yalves un peu bombees, a sommets saillans, tres-obtus. 9. Espece. Unio levigata (Elliptio levigata). Mulette lisse. PI. Lxxx, fig. 11, 12 et 13. Elliptique, arrondie, bombee ; test epais, lisse ; epiderme olivatre ; nacre blanc-bleuatre; dent bilobee peu ridee, lame courte. Longueur 5-T, diametre 4-7, axe 7-16 de la largeur. Petite espece d'un pouce au plus, qui approche des genres Rotun- daria et Cyclas. Dans le Kentuky. Sommets arrondis, saillans, uses. La lame est un peu oblique. Cette espece devrait peut-etre appartenir [297] au sous-genre PZa^ioZa du genre Ohliquaire. 10. Espece. Unio zonalis (Elliptio zonalis). Mulette zonale. Elliptique; test epais, ride ; epiderme roussatre a zones brunes", sommets saillains, bombes. Longueur 3-5, diametre 2-5, axe 2-5 de la largeur. Espece tres-rare : vue une seule fois aux rapides de I'Ohio ; lar- geur au-dela de 2 pouces. 4me. Sous-genre. Eurtnia. Eurynie. Yalves tres-transversales ou tres-larges. Axe presque lateral. Ligament tres-long. 11. Espece. Unio dilatata (Elliptio dilatata), Mulette dilatee. Elliptique, oblongue, un peu attenuee posterieurement ; test epais, presque lisse; epiderme brun-roussatre; nacre violette; dents obtuses, epaisses, lame tant soit peu inclinee. Longueur 1-2, Diamfetre 2-7, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Jolie espece tres-commune, a nacre tres-belle, souvent a reflets pourpres ou bleuatres ; largeur 3 a 4 pouces. Elle varie a epiderme brun ou roux, et a nacre plus ou moins foncee ou pale. Impressions striees ; fossule apparente ; dent bilobee epaisse, rugueuse, lame obtuse. Mollusque jaunatre. 12. Espece. Unio latissima (Elliptio latissima). Mulette large. PI. LXXX, fig. 14 et 15. CONCnOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 43 • Elliptique-oblongue, ua peu attenuee posterieuremeut; test epais, lisse ; epiderme noiratre ; nacre incarnate, contour blanc ; dent bilobee obtuse, ridee, lame carenee, tres-droite et tres-longue. Lon- gueur 2-5, diametre 1-4, axe 1-4 de la largeur, Grande espece, parvenant quelquefois a 8 pouces de largeur. Elle n'est pas aussi commune que la precedente. Dent un peu triedre ; impressions lisses ; fossule . peu marquee, lame en carene, aigue, epaisse, horizontale. . Mollusque blanc. Une espece pareille ou voisine se trouve dans le fleuve Susqueliannah. [293] 13. Espece. Unio solenoides (EUiptio solenoides). Mulette solenoide. EUiptique-cjlindracee, amincie, arrondie anterieurement, tronquce, retuse posterieurement ; test epais, tres-bombe, a rides flexueuses posterieures ; epiderme bruu oliv&tre ; nacre blanche-bleuAtre ; Dent rugueuse, obtuse, lame tres-longue, horizontale. Longueur 3-7, diametre 4-11, axe 3-11 de la largeur. Tres-remarquable. Je Tai observee dans la partie superieure do rOhio, largeur environ 3 pouces ; sommets saillans ; fossule evidente. Yar. 1. Interrupta, a quelques lignes noirdtres, interrompues anterieurement. Yar. 2. Nodosa. A quelques nodosites posterieurement. Yar. 3. Cylindrica. Say. Condi, esp. 8, tab. 4, fig. 3. Test tres- epais ; nacre blanche ; sommets tres-grands. lime. Genre. Lampsilis. Lampsile. Coquille ovale. Ligament courbe. Dent bilobee sillonnee. Dent lamellaire coaYhce, Jlexueuse. Axe extramedial. Contour mai'ginal epaissi. Trois impressions musculaires. — Mollusque semblable a celui de VUnio ; mais a siphons apparens, courts. Le nom est modifie de Lasmacampsilis, qui signifie lame flexuolce, d'apres le caractere essentiel du genre. 14. Espece. Lampsilis car diumi^Joiocoxiiiwm). Lampsile coeur. PI. Lxxx, fig. 16, 17, 18 et 19. Ovale, elargie et inclinee posterieurement, tres-bombee ; sommets saillains, en coeur ; test epais ; epiderme rouxbrun, rugueux, noiratre posterieurement ; nacre blanche, rosee posterieuremeat. Longueur 3-4, diametre 2-5, axe 1-3 de la largeur.. Belle coquille trcs-bombiie ; largeur jusqu'a 6 pouces. Dent 44 rapinesque's bilobee striee et crenelee ; dent lamellaire comprimee, Mollusque blanc ; les appendices bilamellaires larges ; la lame exterieure plus grande. 15. Espfece. Lampsilis ovata (Unio ovata). Lampsile ovale. [299] Unio oratus. Say Conch, esp. 3, tab. 2, fig. t. Ovale, reguliere, attenuee posterieurement, bombee ; sommets saillans ; epiderme corne, brun sur la depression posterieure ; nacre blanche ; test pen epais. Longueur 3-4, diametre 3-10, axe 1-3 de la large ur. Est-ce une variete de la precedente ? Elle parait en differer princi- palement par sa forme moins bombee et non dilatee posterieurement. 16. Espece. Lampsilis fasciola (Unio fasciola), Lampsile fasciole. Ovale, dilatee posterieurement, bombee ; test pen epais ; epiderme olivAtre, a bandes radiees, flexueuses, inegales, verddtres. Longueur 2-3, diametre 2-5, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Nacre blanche-bleuatre. Rare : espece vue dans le Kentuky ; lai'geur 2 a 3 ponces, dent bilobee petite, sillonnee superieurement, lisse et decurrente inferieure- ment ; dent lamellaire mince, plissee.* 111°'. Genre Metaptera. Metaptere. Coquille ovale, triangulaire, dilatee en aile posterieurement ; liga- ment incline sur I'aile. Dent bilobee crenelee. Dent lamellaire cour- bee, detachee du bord de I'aile. Axe extramedial. Contour a peine epaissi. Trois impressions musculaires. — Mollusque semblablo a celui de 1' Unio. Le nom signifie aile posterieure ; j'avais d'abord adopte celui de Froptera, c'etait par erreur, car il eut signifie aile anterieure. rsoo] IT. Espece. Metaptera viegaptera (Unio megaptera). Metaptfere megaptere. PI. lxxx, fig. 20, 21 et 22. * Lea deux especes suivantes que j'ai decouvertes dans le fleuve Hudson, doivent appartenir a i-B genre. Lampsilis rosea. Ovale, dilatee et tronquee obliqnement posterieurement; test epais, ride, oUvatre, noir posterieurement; nacre roace; tres-bombee; sommets saillans. Longueur 5-8, •iiametre 1-2, axe 4-5 de la largeur. Lampsilii pallida. Ovale, dilatee et arrondie posterieurement; test epais, a rides eloignees; iniderme rous-olivatre, a quelqnes raies brunes, obliques posterieurement; nacre blanche. I.-ongaeur 3-4, diametre 1-2, axe 4-5 de la largeur, CONCnOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 45 Test mince, comprime ; epiderme brun, flexueusement rugueux ; nacre pourpree ; aile tres-grande, lisse interieurement ; dent larael- laire double dans la valve droite, et a protuberance oblongue a I'extremite. Longueur 2-3, diametre 2-9, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Belle espece commune dans I'Ohio, a jolie nacre pourpree et iridescente, souvent avec des tubercules perliformes. Dent bilobee a lobes presqu'egaux, lisses exterieurement, creneles, comprimes, sillonncs, interieurement ; impressions anterieures tres-marquees, striees ; la posterieure presqu'effacee, Largeur jusqu'a 6 pouces. L' XJnio alatus de Say. Conch, esp. T, tab. 4, fig. 2, qui se trouve dans le lac Erie, parait se rapprocher beaucoup de cette espece et n'en diJTerer que par son aile rugueuse interieurement ; contour marque, flexueux ; dent lamellaire simple sur la valve droite ; lon- gueur 4-5, de la largeur, etc. 11 parait que les deux especes suivantes de Say devront aussi se rapporter a ce genre ; mais il n'indique pas la lame, comme flexueuse Unto ochraceus. Say Conch, esp. 5, tab. 2, fig. 8. Vnio cariosus. Say Conch, esp. 4, tab. 3, fig. 2. lY"*. Genre. Truncilla. Truncille. Coquille semi-triangulaire. Axe presque medial. Ligament oblique. Troncature plane, oblique, posterieure. Dent bilobee lisse, denticulee et comprimee. Dent lamellaire comprimee, oblique. — Mol- lusqe semblable a celui de VUnio? Le nom derive de la remarquable troncature oblique, qui est bien plus marquee que dans toutes les autres especes de cette famille. 18. Espece. Truncilla triqueter (Unio triqueter). Truncille tri- quetre. PI. lxxxi, fig. 1, 2, 3 et 4. Test pen epais, tres-bombe, sommets saillans; forme presque triedre ; face posterieure tres-plane, un peu tesselee, verruqueuse ; epiderme olivatre-fonce, raye de brun anterieurement, bords et rides [301] flexueux au milieu, nacre blanche-bleuAtre. Longueur 2-3, diametre 1-2, axe 2-5 de largeur. Espfece tres-remarquable et rare, que je n'ai observee qu'aux chutes de I'Ohio ; sa forme est si singuliere qu'on lui a donne le nom vulgaire et particulier de Snuffbox, qui signifie tabatiere. Je n'ai pas vu I'animal, que je soup-coune un peu different de I'Unio. Lar- geur environ un pouce et demi. Dent lamellaire, courte, large et 46 rafinesque's obtuse. Impressions pen profondes : la posterieure trfes-grande, occupant presque tout lefond platde la face posterieure des valves ; fossule pre.'que nulle ; bord du test trl^s-legereraent tlexueux. 19. Espece. TrunciUa truncata Unio truncata). Truncille tronquee. Test peu epais, peu bombe, sommets saillans ; forme un peu equarrie ; face posterieure tronquee ; cpiderrae olivatre ; bord et rides flexueux posterieuremcnt; nacre blanche-bleu^tre. Longueur 4-5, diametre 8-15, axe 5-12 de la largeur, Beaucoup plus commune que la precedente, et plus petite, ordi- nairement d'uu pouce de large. Dents larges ; lame trancliante. Var. 1. Fiisca. Presqu'entierement brune. Var. 2. Vermiculala. A lignes flexueuses, brunes, trans- versales. Y"'. Genre. Obliquaria. Obliquaire. Coquille variable, souvent a peine transversals et plus ou moins oblique posterieuremcnt. Ligament oblique. Dent bilobeecommuae- ment sillonnee : dentlamellaire oblique, souvent droite. Axe variable'. Contour marginal epaissi. Trois impressions musculaires. — Mol- lusque semblable ;i celui de 1' Unio. Ce groupe est nombreux en especes ; il differe principalement de VUnio ou Elliptio par sa forme, par le ligament et la dent lamel- laire oblique, etc. II offre beaucoup d'anomalie et de caracteres secondaires, ce qui m'oblige de le diviser en 6 sous-genres. [3021 1". Sous-Genre. Plagiola. Plagiole. Axe extra-medial. Dent lamellaire courbe. Ligament courbe. Forme variable, mais non oblique. 20, Espece. Ohliquaria decorticata (TJ. decorticata). Obliquaire ecorchee. Test arrondi-elliptique, epais et tres-bombe, sommets saillans ; epiderme noirAtre presque tout detache, rides eloignees ; nacre blanche. Longueur .3-4, diametre 1-2, axe environ 1-3 de la largeur. J'ai observe cette espece dans le museum de M. J. D. Clifford a Lexington ; elle habite dans le Mississipi et apparemment dans la partie inferieure de I'Ohio. Elle a la forme des lampsiles, mais sa dent lamellaire, au lieu d'etre flexueuse, est courbce en arc oblique et court. Quoique I'animal fut vivant, presque tout son epiderme CONCHOLOaiCAL WRITINGS. 4T etait detruit jusqu'a la nacre blanche, et on apercevait aux sommets une nacre intermediaire lisse, luisante et olivatre. Les rides etaient profondes et eloignees. Un leger talus oblique posterieurement ; dents tres-sillonnees ; impressions tres-profondes ; fossule confluente. Largeur au-dela de 4 pouces. 21. Espece. Obliquaria interriipta (TJ. do). Obliquaire interrompue. Test ovale-elliptique, peu epais et peu bombe ; epiderme brun- roussatre, peu ride, a quelques bandes tranversales noiratres inter- rompues ; nacre blanche-bleudtre. Longueur 5-8, diametre 1-3, axe 3-8 de la largeur, Dans le Kentuky et Obio ; largeur environ 2 pouces ; fossule apparente ; dent lamellaire un peu rugueuse, epaisse, carenee. Som- mets non saillams. 22. Espece. Obliquaria depressa (TJ. depressa). Obliquaire deprimee. PI. lxxxi, fig. 5, 6 et 7. Test ovale-triangulaire, epais et tres-deprime ; epiderme ride, 6liv4tre-brun, avec des points noirs, lineaires, obliques, epars ; nacre bleuatre, un peu trouquee posterieurement. Longueur 2-3, diametre 2-9, axe 1-3 de la largeur. [303] Espece tres-rare, que je n'ai vue qu'une fois pres d'Evamville en Indiana. J'ai depose le seul individu que je possede dans le museum de M. J. D. Clifford a Lexington, avec toutes mes autres especes. La coquille est presque plate ; largeur li pouce ; fossules appa- rentes ; dents striees ; lame carenee aigue. Elle se rapproehe du S. Gr. Scalenaria. 23. Espece. Obliquaria lineolata (TJ. lineolata). Obliquaire lineolee. Test presque arrondi, epais, peu bombe, un peu tronque poste- rieurement ; epiderme roussdtrC; peu ride, a quelques lignes brunes ; nacre blanche. Longueur 4-5, diametre 1-2, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Sommets un peu saillains. Aux chutes de I'Ohio ; largeur environ 2 pouces ; portion tron- quee posterieure, plane, etroite ; impressions profondes, rugueuses, lamellaires, courtes, epaisses, carenees, rugueuses, presque droites. 2'"^ Sous-Genre. Ellipsaria. Ellipsaire. Axe extra-medial ; dent lamellaire droite ; ligament droit ; forme elliptique. 48 eafinesque's 24. Espece. Ohliquaria ellipsaria (TT. ellipsaria). Obliqnaire ellipsaire. Test elliptique, on angle diagonal posterieur ; epiderme peu ride, rou^-olivatre ; nacre blanche. Axe presque lateral. Longueur 3-4, diametre 3-8, axe 1-5 de la largeur. Var. 1. Fusca. Entierement brune. Largeur : environ 5 pouces ; point de fossule. Dans le Kentuky • elle se rapproche du G. Amblema ; ligament horizontal. 25. Espece. Ohliquaria fasciolaris (U. fasciolaris). Obliquaire fasciolee. Test epais, convexe, ovale-elliptique ; attenue posterieurement ; epiderme presque lisse, rouss^tre, a bandes obliques brunes ; nacre blanche. Longueur 2-3, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Var. 1. Interrupta. Bandes interrompues. [304] Yar. 2. Fuscata. Presqu'entierement brune, bandes noires. Var. 3. Ohliterata. Bandes presqu'obliterees, test tres-epais. Var. 4. Longa. Longueur 3-4 de la largeur. Espece assez commune dans I'Ohio, le Wabash, Kentuky, etc. Elle parait intermediaire entre VU. interrupta (esp. 21), et VU. nasuta de Say. Son mollusque est blanc, semblable a celui des elliptes. Un earactere remarquable de cette espece consiste dans la eavite des valves ; elle est munie de quelques rides obliques. Liga- ment un peu oblique ; sommeta epais, mais non saillans ; dents bilobees ridees, epaisses ; lame epaisse, courte ; fossule apparente ; impressions profondes. Largeur jusqu'a 5 pouces. 26. Espece. Ohliquaria verrucosa (U. verrucosa). Obliquaire verruqueuse. PI. lxxxi, fig. 10, 11 et 12. Test peu epais, elliptique, en talus oblique posterieurement, a rides verruqueuses ; epiderme brun-roussatre ; nacre blanche. Lon- gueur 2-3, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Espece remarquable par plusieurs rangs concentriques de vermes inegales, aplaties, souvent blanches par le frottement. Dans I'Ohio ; largeur 3 pouces ; dent bilobee a un lobe tres-gros, ride, I'autre petit et lisse ; impressions profondes et lisses ; dent lamellaire obtuse ; ligament horizontal. 2T. Espece. Ohliquaria cuprea (U. cuprea). Obliquaire cuivree. PI. LXXXI, fig. 8 et 9. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 49 Test epais elliptique, en talus oblique posterieurement ; epiderme noir presque lisse ; nacre cuivree. Longueur 3-5, diametre 5-8, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Tres-jolie espfece de 2 pouces de large, a nacre singuliere, a teinte incarnate brunie presque cuivree, et a reflets pourpres. Je I'ai trouvee dans le Monongahela et le Potowmak ; lame courte ; pointe de fos- Bule ; dents pen ridees ; ligament horizontal.* [305] 3"°. Sous-Genre. Quadrula. Quadrule. Forme ecarrie mais arrondie anterieurement, ii peine tran- versale. 28. Espece. Obliquariajlava (U. Qslysl). Obliquaire jaune. PI. Lxxxi, fig. 13 et 14. Test peu epais, convexe en talus posterieurement; sommets un peu saillans, entiers, rugueux ; epiderme presque lisse, brun jaunitre; nacre incarnate. Longueur 5-7, diametre et axe 2-7 de la largeur. Belle espece, qui ne se trouve que dans les petites rivieres se jetant dans le Kentnky, Saltriver et Greenriver. Largeur 2 a 4 pouces. Le mollusque est jaune fonce ou orange, a grand pied circulaire ; da reste semblable a celui de VEllipta. La coquille est presque jaune dans sa jeunesse ; lame cai'enee mince ; dents striees de toutes parts; ligament oblique, voisine de VU. lineolata, qui peut-etre doit se placer ici. 29. Espfece. Obliquaria cyphya (U. cypliia.). Obliquaire cyphie. Test epais bombe, bossele, bord flexueux, en talus posterieure- ment ; epiderme brun-ch4tain ; tubercule a rides flexueuses ; nacre blanche. Longueur 8-9, diametre et axe 5-9 de la largeur. Largeur 2 a, 3 pouces ; test plus epais anterieurement, a grosses- rides et a quelques tubercules oblongs; une grosse bosse oblique longitudinale ; dents epaisses striees. Aux chutes de I'Ohio. *L'Uhio nasuta de Say, Conch, tab. 4, fig. 1, parait devoir appartenir a ce aous-genre, et I'espece Buivante que j'ai obserTee dans le fleuve Hudson, etat de New-York, s'en rapprocha beanconp. En est-ce une variete ? Obliquaria attenuata. Elliptique, dilatee, attenuee, et en talus posterieurement. Ligament horizontal ; epiderme rugueux, brun foneee ; nacre rose-pale. Longueur 1-2, diametre 1-4, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Environ 4 pouces. D 50 bafinesque's 30. Espece. ObUquaria metanevra (U. metanevra). Obliquaire metanevre. PI. lxxxi, fig. 15 et 16, Test epais bombe, bossele, a deux sinus marginaux : un postcrieur et un terminal, en talus et nerve posterieurement ; epiderme ride, [306] brun^tre, a taches noirdtres ; nacre incarnate. Longueur 4-5, diame- tre 7-10, axe 4-10 de la largeur. Petite espece rare ; n'ayant gueres plus d'un pouce de largeur ; dans le Kentuky ; test aminci posterieurement; nervures coiirbes obliques sur le bord dilate, posterieur ; une ou deux bosselures sur I'elevation oblique ; lame courte et large ; dent striee ; fossule nulle. 31. Espece. ObUquaria rejiexa (U. reflexa). Obliquaire reflecliie. Test epais, convexe, bossele, presqu'arrondi, tronque posterieure- ment, borde inferieur refleclii avec uu sinus posterieur ; epiderme roussAtre, presque lisse, rugueux posterieurement ; nacre blanche, iridescente. Longueur 5-6, diametre 2-3, axe 5-12 de la longueur. Largeur un pouee et demi ; test aminci posterieurement ; deux bosselures sur I'elevation mediale ; son bout refleclii ; rides eloignees, flexueuses, en forme de sutures ; lame alongee, carenee, tres-legere- ment courbee ; dent tres-striee ; fossule apparente. Dans le Ken- tuky et aux rapides de Letart. Peut-etre appartient-elle au S. G. Botundaria f 32. Espece. ObUquaria retusa (Unio retusa). Obliquaire retuse. PI. LXXXI, fig. 19 et 20. Test epais, convexe, sans elevations, a leger sinus terminal ; dpi- derme olivdtre, a rides legeres, distantes ; nacre blanch4tre. Lon- gueur 7-8, diametre 3-8, axe 1-3 de la largeur. Petite espece d'un pouce ou deux de large ; rare ; dans I'Oliio et le Kentuky. Lame courte, carenee ; fossule non-apparente. 33. Espece. ObUquaria Jiexuosa (Unio flexuosa). Obliquaire flexueuse. Test epais, a deux legeres elevations et une large depi'ession plate entr'elles, en talus posterieurement; epiderme brun - jaun^tre, lineole de brun a la base, a rides flexueuses, un peu strides ; bord flexueux ; nacre bleuitre. Longueur 6-T, diametre 3-7, axe 3-7 de la largeur. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS, 51 [307] Dans le Kentuky, Salt-river et Green-river. Largeur environ deux pouces ; lame, courte, presque doublee meme dans la valve droite ; fossule apparente ; dent lamellaire petite, striee ; impres- sions profondes. Yar. 1. Bullata. A quelques tubercules larges, plats et transver- saux sur les elevations. 34. Espece. Obliquar'ia nodulata (Unio uodulata). Obliquaire nodulee, PI. lxxxi, fig. 17 et 18. Test epais, bombe, nodule, en talus postcrieurement et tronque verticalement ; des tubercules lineaires longitudinaux sur la dilata- tion posterieure ; epiderme presque lisse, brun-roussatre ; nacre iridescente. Longueur 11-12, diametre 2-3, axe 1-8 de la largeur. Largeur un pouce et demi ; dans le Kentuky ; quatre nodosites distantes ; dent bilobee, epaisse, striee ; impressions profondes ; lame carenee. Elle ressemble a VO. retusa, toutes deux ont la lame tant soit peu courbe. 35. Espece. Ohliquaria quadrula (Unio quadrula). Obliquaire quadrule. Test tres-epais, un peu bombe, a elevation longitudinale oblique, a sillon oblique et sinus posterieurement ; epiderme brun, ride : rides striees et tuberculees anterieurement ; nacre blanche, rosce sur les bords. Longueur 6-T, diametre 4-7, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Largeur 2 a 3 pouces ; assez commune dans I'Ohio ; quelques tubercules oblongs transversaux sur I'elevation ; test un peu sinue en face ; lame courte, epaisse, carenee, striee ; fossule confluente ; dent grande, striee ; sommets tronques. 36. Espece. Ohliquaria bullata (TJ. bullata). Obliquaire bullee. Test epais, convexe, peu bombe, a sillon oblique et sinus poste- rieurement, parseme de tubercules irreguliers, confluens ; epiderme roussatre, a rides flexueuses, distantes ; nacre blanche, incarnate. Longueur 11-12, diametre 2-3, axe 1-3 de la largeur. [308] Aux chutes de I'Ohio, rare ; largeur un peu moins de 2 pouces ; dents et lames comme au precedent ; sommets arrondis, uses, mais non tronques ; les tubercules sont souvent uses et blanchis, aplatis, pustules, de forme variable. 52 rafinesque's 4°'. Sous-genre. Rotundaria. Rotundaire. Forme arrondie, a peine transversale, presque equilaterale, axe presque medial; ligament courbe, court, corne ; dent lamellaire, legerement courbee ; dent bilobee a peine anterieure. 37. Espece Obliquaria tuberculata (JJ. inhevcn\a,t&). Obliquaire tuberculee. Test tres-epais, bombe, un peu tronque postcrieurement, parserae de tubercules inegaux, hormis anterieurement ; epiderme ride, brun-chAtain ; nacre violacee. Longueur 10-11, diametre 6-11, axe 5-11. Tres-commune dans I'Ohio et les rivieres adjacentes. Largeur 3 pouces au plus. Mollusqae jauneLtre ; dent epaisse, tres-rugueuse ; lame courte, carenee ; fossule confluente ; impressions profondes. Elle varie a nacre bleu^tre ou pourpre-fonce. 38. Espece. Obliquaria subrotunda (U. subrotunda). Obliquaire arrondie. PI. lxxxi, fig. 21, 22 et 23. Test epais, bombe, couvexe, parfaitement arrondi ; epiderme presque lisse, brun fauve ; nacre blanche-bleudtre. Longueur presqu'egale, diametre 3-4, axe 7-16 de la largeur. Yar. 1. Maculata. Parseme de taches noir^tres. Espece tres-commune dans I'Ohio et toutes les rivieres qui s'y jettent ; remarquable par sa forme presqu'equilaterale, et nuUement transversale ; sommets saillans, arrondis ; dents epaisses, sillonnees; lame carenee, courte, un peu, 4)ointillee ; fossule confluente ; impres- sion anterieure, pointillee. 39. Espece. Obliquaria pusilla (Unio pusilla). Obliquaire petite. Test epais, couvexe, parfaitement arrondi; epiderme lisse, noirAtre; [309] nacre blanche. Longueur 6-Y, diametre 2-7, axe 3-7 de la largeur. Trfes-rare ; dans la partie inferieure de I'Ohio. Largeur : gueres plus d'an demi-pouce ; forme et apparence d'un Cyclas; dents presque lisses ; lame lineaire. Est-ce un jeuneindividu ? S"". Sous-genre. Scalenaria. Scalenaire. Forme triangulaire oblique, a peine transversale, mais tres-inequi- laterale ; axe presque lateral ; dent bilobee a peine anterieure ; dent lamellaire droite ; ligament oblique. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 53 40. Espece. Obliquaria ohliqvata (IT. obliquata). Obliquaire obliquee. Test tres-epais, bombe, ovale-triangulaire ; les trois cotes arques ; ane legere depression longitudinale oblique ; epiderme presque lisse, noir; nacre rose pourpree. Longueur 9-10, diametre 6-10, axe 2-10 de la largeur. Jolie espece, a belle nacre pourpree, a reflets irldescens. Dans le Kentuky. Largeur 2 a 3 pouces ; lame longue, carcnee ; fossule grande, distincte ; dents ridees ; impressions profondes ; sommets saillans, tronques. 41. Espece. Obliquaria triangularis (JJ.ixi^xv^vXsiVh). Obliquaire triangulaire. Test tres-epais, bombe, triangulaire ; face posterieure droite ; sommets saillans ; point de depression longitudinale ; epiderme brun, presque lisse ; nacre blanclie-rosce. Longueur 3-4, diametre 1-2, axe 1-6 de la largeur. Yar. 1. Nigrescens. Epiderme noirAtre ; nacre blanche. Commune dans I'Ohio ; largeur jusqu'a 4 pouces ; dents tres- grosses, sillonnees ; lame grosse, carenee ; impression et#fossule profondes. 42. Espece. Obliquaria scalenia (JJ . scalenia). Obliquaire scalene. PI. Lxxxi, fig. 24 et 25. Test epais, bombe, triangulaire ; les cotes presque droits, surtout le posterieur qui est tronque ; angles arrondis point de depression ; [310] epiderme lisse, roussAtre, a quelques lignes longitudinales obliques brunes ; nacre blanche. Longueur T-9, diametre 5-9, axe 1-5 de la largeur. Largeur environ 2 pouces ; dans le Kentuky, etc. ; dents et lame sillonnees ; forme confluente ; lignes etroites, distantes, radices. 6"^ Sous-genre. Sintoxia. Sintoxe. Forme ovale-oblique ; dent lamellaire et ligament eourbes. 43. Espece. Obliquaria lateralis (U. lateralis). Obliquaire laterale. Test epais, bombe, ovale-oblique, a legere depression oblique, longi- tudinale, courbee, etroite ; epiderme ride, brun ; nacre blanche. Longueur 4-5, diametre 3-5, axe 1-5 de la largeur. Largeur 2 a 3 pouces ; dents grosses, strides ; fossules apparentes ; lame epaisse, carenee, un peu doublee dans les deux valves. 54 rapinesque's 44. Espece. Obliquaria sintoxia (U. siutoxia). Obliquaire sintoxe. Test epais, borube, ovale-oblique, sans depression ; epiderine noir at presque lisse ; nacre rosee. Longueur 9-10, diametre 6-10, axe 2-5 de la largeur. Dans I'Obio ; rare ; largeur 2 a 3 pouces, tres-voislne de VObo- var'ia pachostea, de VObliq. ohliquata et de VObl'iq. triangularis ; dents eomme cette derniere. Par sa forme elle fait le passage avec le genre suivant, Obovaria. 11°'. Sous-famille. Amblemidia. Les Amblemides. Coquille longitudinale ; dent bilobee inferieure ; dent latnellaire inferieure, verticale ; axe terminal ; rides zonales. VI""'. Genre. Obovaria. Obovaire. Coquille obovale, presqu'equilaterale ; axe presque medial ; ligament courbe ; dent bilobee striee ; dent lamellaire presque yerticale, un pen courbee ; contour marginal epaissi ; trois impres- sions musculaires ; mollusque semblable a VUnio, mais ayanfc I'anus inferieur. [3!li* 45. Espece. Obovaria obovalis (TJnio obovalis). Obovaire . obovale. Test epais, bombe, arrondi inferieurement ; sommets saillans ; epiderme brun-faure, ride ; nacre blanche. Largeur iuferieure 8-9, diametre 2-3 de la longueur, axe medial. Cette espece est commune dans I'Ohio et les rivieres voisines. Longueur de 2 i\ 3 pouces ; dents larges, epaisses, rugueuses ; lame carenee, un peu oblique ; impressions profondes. 46. Espece. Obovaria torsa (Unio torsa). Obovaire tordue. PI. Lxxxii, fig. 1, 2 et 3. Test tres-epais, bombe, arrondi inferieurement; epiderme brunatre; nacre pourpree. Largeur mediale 6-7, diametre 3-T de la longueur, axe medial. Var. Marginata. Nacre a contour blanc. Espece rare dans I'Ohio, plus commune dans les petites rivieres. Longueur 1 a 2 pouces. Remarquable par ses sommets tournes en avant et ses grandes rides souvent divisees en deux par un sillon ; dents et lames ridees; fossule apparente ; lame un peu oblique, presque double, meme dans la valve droite. 47. Espece. Obovaria striata (Unio striata). Obovaria striee. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS, 5o Test epais, bombe, arrondi inferieurement, a rides strides ; sommets k peine saillans ; epiderme brun ; nacre blanche. Largeur mediale 10-11, diametre 6-11 de la longueur, axe 2-5 de la largeur. Yar. 1. Tuherculata. Quelques tubercules striees sur les rides. Var. 2, Rosea. Epiderme roussAtre, brun anterieurement ; nacre ros^tre. Longueur environ 3 ponces. Dans la partie superieure de I'Obio. Mollusque jaune ; lame presque verticale, epaisse ; dents sillonnees ; fossule apparente. [312] 48. Espece. Obovaria pachostea (U. pachostea). Obovaire pacbostee. Test excessivement epais, bombe, arrondi et attcnue ou flexuenx inferieurement ; sommets un peu saillans ; epiderme brun, peu ride; nacre violacee-pAle ; contour flexueux. Largeur mediale 9-10, diame- tre T-12 de la longueur, axe oblique 2-5 de la largeur. Espece remarquable, a cavite interieure tres-petite et ridee ; large cavite sous la dent ; elle se rapproche du S. G. sintoxia, G. obliqua- ria, par son axe un peu oblique, ou par une legere dilatation poste- rieure. Dans le Kentuky. Longueur 3 a 1 pouces. Lame courte, verticale, obtuse ; dents tres-grosses et larges, sillonnees ; fossule apparente. 49. Espece. Obovaria stegaria (Unio stegara). Obovaire tuilee. PI. Lxxxii, fig. 4 et 5. Test epais, bombe, arrondi inferieurement, un peu tulle par de grosses rides ecartees ; sommets un peu saillans ; epiderme brun ; nacre blanche. Largeur inferieure 12-13 de la longueur, diametre 2-3 de la largeur, axe medial. Yar. 1. Tuberculata. A quelques tubercules epars. Yar. 2. Fasciolaia. Fasciolee de brun verdatre ; nacre' rosatre. » Jolie espece, rarement longue de plus d'un pouce ; lame un peu oblique, droite, obtuse ; dents striees ; fossule apparente ; assez rare dans I'Ohio. 50. Espece. Obovaria cordata (Unio cordata). Obovaire cordee. PL LXXXII, fig. 6 et 7. Test epais, bombe, corde inferieurement par un sinus etune Icgfere depression ; epidcrmp lisse, brun ; nacre blanche ; sommets un peu 56 rapinesqtje's saillans. Laigeur inferieure 11-12, diametre 2-3 de la longueur, axe medial. Yar. 1. Rosea. Epiderme noirdtre ; nacre rosatre. Jolie petite espece d'environ un pouce de longueur ; dans I'Ohio etc. rare. Lame doublee aigue, a peine oblique, droite ; dents [313] sillonnees. Elle se rapproche beaucoup de V Obliquaria retusa. VII"'. Genre Pleurobema. Pleurobeme. Coquille oblongue, tres-inequilaterale ; ligament droit ou plutot unilateral ; axe totalement lateral ou posterieur ; dent lamellaire verticale ; dent bilobee peu ridee ; sous le sommet qui est superieur, terminal ; quatre impressions musculaires ; moUusque semblable a VUnio, mais anus et siphons inferieurs. 51. Espece. Pleui'obema mytiloides (U. Mytiloides). Pleurobeme mytiloide. PI. lxxxii, fig. 8, 9 et 10. Test epais et bombe superieurement, attenue aux deux bouts ; sommets saillains, entiers ; epiderme presque lisse, roussatre, a quelques bandes obliques, noires, longitudinales ; nacre bleuMre ; lame etroite. Largeur 3-5, diametre 1-2 de la longueur, axe 1-6 de la largeur. Espfece rare : observee dans le Wabash. Longueur 2 pouces • sommets un peu anguleux, tres-saillaus, entiers, formant un coeur ; lame tres-droite ; impression et fossule profondes. 52. Espece. Pleurobema cuneata (Unio cuneata). Pleurobeme cuneiforme. Test epais et bombe superieurement, oblong-ovale, attenue en coin inferieureraent, avrondi superieurement; sommets saillans, tronques ; epiderme presque lisse, brun ; nacre blanche, iridescente ; lame a peine droite. Largeur 5-1 diametre 1-2 de la longueur; axe 1-6 de la largeur. Var. 1. Maculata. Quelques taches noires, eparses, equar- ries. Yar. 2. Sulcata. Legcre depression longitudinale. Assez commune dans I'Ohio pres de Steubenvllle, Marietta, etc. Longueur 1 a 3 pouces. Elle differe principalement de la precedente par sa forme, par sa lame un peu courbe, etc. Mollusque jaundtre- pale ; impressions profondes : la fossule forme une quatrifeme impression trfes-marquee. . _ CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS, 57 [314] Yjjjme Qenre. Amblema. Ambleine. ' Coquille ovale, elliptique ou equarrie, tres-inequilatcrale ; axe lateral posterieur; sommet lateral oblique, presque superieur ; ligament droit; dent lamellaire verticale; dent bilobee ridee, laterale ail sommet ; trois impressions musciilaires ; mollusqiie semblable au PJeurohema. 53. Espece. Amblema olivaria (U. olivaria). Ambleme oliraire. Test cpais, pen bombc, ovale, elliptique; sommetsa peine saillans, presque superieurs ; epiderme ride, olivatre ; nacre blanche, irides- cente ; lame droite. Largeur 2-3, diametre 4-9, axe 1-20 de la longueur. Var. 1. Dilatata, abase dilatee siiperieurement. . Var. 2. FasciolaiHs, a bandes rayonnees, brunes. Dans le Keutuky. Longueur 2 a 3 pouces. Intermediare entre ce genre et le precedent ; fossule apparente ; dents peu ridees ; lame epaisse ; ligament dorc, 54. Espece. Ohliquaria rubra (U. rubra). Obliquaire rouge. Test epais, bombe, un peu elliptique ; sommets peu saillans, a leger sinus oblique ou large ; sillon posterieur ; aux presque lateral ; epiderme ride, noiratre ; nacre, rouge-pourpree. Longueur 5-7, diametre 4-7, axe 1-7 de la largeur. Yar. 1. Lineata. Roussdtre, lineolde de briin. Yar. 2. Pallida. Brunatre, nacre pale. Dans le Kentuky. Longueur environ 2 pouces. Elle a quelques rfipports avec VElliptio et VObliqnaria ellipsaria. Lame un peu obtuse, tres-legerement oblique ; dent epaisse rugueuse ; nacre jolie, iridescente, a reflets bleuitres ; point de fossule ; mollusque jaun- atre. 55. Espece. Amblema tor ulosa {XJ mo torulosa). Ambleme toru- leuse. PI. Lxxxii, fig. 11 et 12. Test epais, peu bombe, elliptique-equarri, a legere depression oblique et quelques nodules, bords flexueux ; epiderme olivatre, a rides flexiieuses ; nacre blancbe-bleu&tre. Largeur 3-4, diametre 1-2, axe 1-5 de la longueur. [315] Yar. 1. Angulata. Depression presque nulle, contour presque anffuleux. 68 RAFINESQUE'S « Longueur 2 pouces. Dans I'Ohio et Kentuky ; 2 ou 3 nodules sur I'elevation oblique ; lame tres-droite ; point de fossule ; dent ridee. 56. Espece Amblema gibbosa (Unio gibbosa) Amblfeme bossue. Test cpais, bombe, ovale-elliptique, a deux grosses cotes noueuses, obliques, a depression intermediaire, bords flexueux ; epiderme brun- rousatre, presque lisse ; nacre blanche. Largeur 2-3, diametre 4-7, axe 2-9 de la longueur. Yar. 1. OUvacea. Epiderme olivdtre, a rides flexueuses. Yar. 2. Radiata, A lignes radices, pAles. Yar. 3. Difformis. A bosselures et depressions difformes. Tres-commune dans I'Ohio et les rivieres adjacentes. Longueur 1 a 3 pouces. Lame courte, oblique, obtuse ; fossule tres-apparente; dents ridces ; sommets saillans en coeur. Elle a de tres-grands rap- ports avec le G. Ohliquaria ; mais la dent bilobee est sous le som- met et presque inferieure. 57. Espece. Amblema costata (Unio costata). Ambleme costee. PI. Lxxxii, fig. 13 et 14. Test peu epais, applati, un peu equarri, ji large cotes longitudi- nales, peu oblique, flexueux, dilate en aile sous le ligament, a cotes obliques courbees, bords ondulcs ; epiderme jaundtre, presque lisse; nacre blanche, iridescente. Largeur 4-5, diametre 3-10, axe 3-20 de la longueur. C'est une des plus belles coquilles de I'Ohio ; elle y est rare ; elle I'est moins dans les petites rivieres du Kentuky, etc. Elle parvient presqu'a 6 pouces de longueur. Sa nacre est lavee d'incarnat et :i reflets violets. Elle produit des perles ; j'en ai vu une oblongue d'un quart de pouce de long. Sommets obliques rides, entiers ; lame longue, large, aigue, comprimee, legerement oblique ; point de fossule ; dent striee inferieure. Bords interieurs ondules. Mollusque jaune. [316] IIL Sous-famille. Anodontidia. Les Anodontides. Coquille transverse. Point de dents ni de lames. IX'"^ Genre. Anodonta. Anodonte. Coquille elliptique ou ovale ; ligament droit ou courbe. Axe extra-medial; trois impressions musculaires peu apparentes ; contour a peine epaissi ; mollusque comme celui de VVnio. CONCnOLOOICAL WRITINGS. 59 Ce genre pent se diviser en trois sous-genres tres-marques. 1. Sous-Genre. Anodonta. Anodonte. Nulles rides lamellaires a la charniere. Ce S. Gr. comprend la plupart des especes, telles que A. anatina, A. cygnea, A. radiata, A. marginata, Say A. cataracta, Say, etc. Outre les deux especes suivantes que j'ai observees dans le fleuve Hudson. Anodonta atra. Test bombe, mince, lisse, elliptique, noiratre ; nacre blanche anterieurement, rousse, iridescente posterieurenient. Longueur 1-2, diametre 5-12, axe 1-3 de la largeur. — Largeur jusqu'a 6 pouces. Anodonta cuneata. Test peu bombe, mince, elliptique, attcnue postcrieurement ; epiderme ride, brun-olivatre ; nacre blanche- bleu^tre. Longueur 1-2, diametre 1-4, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Lar- geur 4 a 5 pouces. 2. Sous-Genre. Stropiiitus. Strophite. Charniere a projection margiuale sous le bee. L'^. undulata de Say, forme ce S G. qui pourrait bien, ainsi que le suivant, etre considere comme un genre. 3. Sous-Genre. Lastexa. Lastt-ne. Charniere a deux rides transversales,obtuses, presquelamelliformes, divergeant de chaque cute du bee. Ligament droit, membraneux, double, ou anterieur ou postcrieur. 58. Espece. Anodonta ohiensis (Lastena ohiensis). Anodonta de I'Ohio. Test tres-mince, fragile, transparent, bombe, elliptique, un peu aile et ensuite tronque obliquement en arriere ; sommets entiers, rides ; epiderme lisse, olivdtre ou brun; nacre-bleuatre. Longueur [317] 5-9, diametre et axe 1-3 de la largeur. Var. 1. Badiata. OUvatre-cuivre, a bandes radices, verdatres. Yar. 2. Viridis. D'un beau vert-olivatre. Yar. 3. Violacina. Nacre violacee. Yar. 4. Nlgrescens. NoirAtre-olivatre. Tres-commune dans I'Ohio et toutes les rivit-res adjaeentes. Largeur de 2 a 4 pouces ; les rides lamellaires sont jDarfaitement separees des bords de la coquille. L'aile posterieure est comprimee, angulaire, en talus et brundtre. II aurait peut-etre etc convenable de nommer cette espece A, mutahilis. 59. Espece. Anodonta lata (Lastena lata). Anodonta elargie. PI. Lxxxii, fig. n et 18. GO rafinesque's Test tres-mince, fragile, transparent, convexe, elliptique-oblong; sommets ocorchcs, presqu'invisibles ; cpiclerme brun, noiratrc ante- rieuremeni ; nacre bleuatre, violette sous les sommets. Longueur 3-8, diametre 2-9, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Eare, dans le Kentuky, etc. Largeur 2 a 3 pouees. Rides 1am- ellaires attenantes au bord, I'antcrieure a peine apparente. Elle doit peut-etre former un autre S. G. Hemistena, ouetrereunie au premier S. G. ; mais le ligament est double, ou ctendu des deux cotes des sommets. Les Lastenes se rapproclient du G. Dipsas. IV. Sous-famille. Alasmidia. Les Alasmides. Coquille transverse ; une dent primaire anterieure ; point de dent lamellaire. X™^ Genre. Alasmidonta. Alasmidonte. Coquille ovale ou elliptique ; axe extra-medial ; trois cicatrices ou impressions musculaires ; ligament droit, embrique, etc. 60. Espece. Alasmidonta marginata. Alasmidonte marginee. Ovale-elliptique, en talus posterieurement et a rides obliques- obtuses ; epiderme brun-olivatre, radio de vert et ride zonalement ; [318] nacre blancbe-bleuatre, a contours blancs ; dent simple, comprimce, oblique. Longueur 1-2 de la largeur. Ce genre et cette espece ont ete etablis par Say, dans le Journal de VAcademie des Sciences naiurelles de Philadeljjhie, vol. 1, p. 459. II y rapporte en outre son Unio undulata, Conch, tab. 3, fig. 3, et il faut y ajouter aussi I'espece suivante. Celle-ci se trouve dans la riviere Scioto. Longueur 2 pouees et demi. Je ne I'ai point observce vivante, mais je I'ai vue dans le cabinet de I'Academie. 61. Espece. Alasmidonta costata. Alasmidonte costce. PI. Lxxxii, fig. 15 et 16. Test mince, elliptique, legerement bombe, un peu sinueux ante- ricurement, ondule et a larges cotes courbees posterieurement ; epiderme presque lisse, olivAtre anterieurement, noiratre posterieure- ment ; nacre blanche, lavee d'incarnat ; dent bilobee comprimee, oblique, crenelee. Longueur 1-2, diametre 1-4, axe 2-9 de la largeur. J'ai observe cette belle coquille dans le museum de M. Clifford a Lexington : elle a ete recueillie dans la riviere Kentuky, ou elle parait ctre rare. Largeur pros de cinq pouees. Elle est ecorchee CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 61 anterieuvement etsnpcrieurement, mais tres-entiere posterieurement ; cotes tres-grandes inferieurement; ligament come, ecailleux, erabrique; dent decurrente ; lame remplacee par un petit angle court, oblique ; de petits tubercules dans I'iutcrieur. Y. Sous-famille Cycladia. Les Cycladees. Coquille presqu'equilaterale ; deux dents la,mellaires : une ante- rieure et une posterieure ; souvent une ou plusieurs dents cardinales, intermediaires sous le sommet. XP"'. Genre Cyclas. Cyclade. Deux impressions musculaires ; lames obliques ; rides zonales ; contour non epaissi. Ce genre a besoin d'etre reforme nonobstant les travaux de Megerle et Ferussac. Je propose de le diviser en quatre sous-genres qui [319] pourraient peut-etre former autant de genres. 1. Polymesoda. Plusieurs dents intermediaires aux deux valves ; test arrondi ou un peu transversal. Type : Cyclas caroUniana Bosc, etc. 2. Phymesoda. Une dent inlermedialre a une valve ; test un peu transversal. Type : C. lacustris, G. dubia Say, etc. 3. Amesoda. Point de dent intermediaire a une valve au moins ; test un peu transversal. Type : G. similis Say, G. lasmamjjsis, etc. 4. Gorhicula. (Megerle). Plusieurs dents intermediaires aux deux valves ; test triangulaire ou un peu alonge. Type : G. ham- malis, G. Jluviatilis, etc, 62. Espece. Gyclas lasmampsis (Araeroda lasmampsis). Cyclade lasmampside. PI. lxxxii, fig. 19, 20 et 21. Test transparent, bo.mbe, un peu arrondi ; rides serrees, inegales, plus eloignees et larges supcrieurement ; lames flexueuses, I'ante- rieure tordue, elargie ; longueur 3-4, diametre 1-2, axe 5-12 de la largeur, nacre bleudtre. Largeur 1-3 ou 1-2 pouce ; epiderme variable, noir, noiratre, bran, brunatre, olivatre, I'oussatre, corne, etc. ; sommets arrondis, non-saillans. Dans I'OMo et les rivieres adjacentes. Points de dents intermediaires. 63. Espece. Gyclas equalis (Phymeroda equalis) Cyclade egale. Test transparent, bombe, arrondi ; rides serrees, presqu'egales, $2 rafixesque's obtuses ; lames un peu flexueuscs, courtcs, distantes, cgales ; dent intermediaire oblique, unique dans chaque valve ; epiderme corne ; nacre bleuatre ; longueur 4-5, diametre 2-3, de la largeur, axe medial. Petite espece ; longueur 1-4 de pouce ; rare dans I'Ohio ; dent interne, peu apparente, obliquement inclince posterieurement ; valve droite a 2 fossules oblongues, lamellaires ; presqu'egales ; la gauche a dent lamellaire correspondante ; sommets arrondis non- saillans. [320] SUPPLEMENT. Je vais dccrire dans ce supplement deux especes qui n'appartien- nent qu'imparfaitement a mon sujet ; car I'une est une coquille trivalve etl'autre une moule de la Louisiane. J'y ajouterai quelques especes qui ont ete omises a leurs places respectives, ou reconnues durant mon travail. XIP. Genre. Tremesia, Trcmcsie. Test trivalve, inequivalve ; valve principale patelloide, perforee au centre ; la petite valve fermant ce trou en guise d'opercule ; troisifeme valve infcrieure, laterale ; mollusque cephale, a tete extensible par I'ouverture mcdiale, a deux yeux lateraux ; point de tentacules. Ce genre singulier parait etre le type d'une nouvelle famille inter- mediaire entre les Brachiopes, les Tcredaires et les Patellaires ; elle a trois valves comme les Tcredaires ; mais une tete comme les Patellaires, et cette tete oculee et tentaculee est centrale au lieu d'etre terminale. 64. Espece. Tremesia patelloides. Trcmcsie patelloide. PI. Lxxxii, fig. 22, 2.3 et 24. Yalve principale arrondie, un peu conique, striee concentrique- ment et tesselee par des stries courbes, obliques, transversales ; ouverture ronde; petites valves lisses: I'inferieure oblique, obovale; mollusque strie flexueusemeut en dessous, aigu a I'oppose de la valve inferieure ; tete tronquce. Animal bien singulier, que j'avais deja annoncd I'annce passee sous le nom fautif de Notrema dans V American Monthly Magazine. II se trouve dans la partie inferieure de I'Ohio, attache anx pierres comme les Patelles, par sa base ; test fauve-brun ; valve operculaire brune, luisante, mobile; diametre environ un pouce, hauteur un demi-pouce. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 63 65. Espece. Mytilus recurvus. Moule recourbee. Test obovale, cuneiforme, recourbe, a stries longitudinales cle trois longueurs ; epiderme noirdtre ; nacre-violette ; bees obliques, a [321] un angle decurrent de chaque cote ; bord iuferieur et interieur strie, crenele ; largeur '7-12, diametre 5-12, de la longueur, longueur 1 j\ 2 pouces. EUe se trouve dans le Mississipi pres de la jSTouvelle- Orleans. Les stries sont souvent bifide«. Partie bdillante oblongue, laterals. 66. Espece. TJnio teres (Elliptio teres). Mulette ronde. Test peu epais, bombe, elliptique, elargi, tronque inferieurement, posterieurement et obliquement ; epiderme presque lisse, come ; nacre blanche, iridescente ; longueur environ 2-5, diametre 2-.o, axe 1-5 de la largeur. Appartient au sous -genre Eurynia. (Yoyez p. 297.) Largeur environ 3 pouces. Dans la riviere Wabash, legerement sinuee inferieurement ; sommets effaces ; lame longue, mince ; dent crenelee, decurrente. 67. Espece. Obliquaria sinuata. (IJnio sinuata). Obliq. sinuee. Test epais, bombe, elliptique, sinue inferieurement ; epiderme roussatre, ride; nacre blanche, asillons profonds, obliques, interieurs; longueur 1-2, diametre 1-3, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Appartient au sous-genre Ellipsaria. (Voyez p. 303.) Dans le Kentuky. Largeur 4 pouces; lame epaisse, oblique, droite, ridee ; fossule apparente ; dent striee. 68. Espece. Obliquaria atroviolacea (Unio atroviolacea). Obliq, violet-brun. Test peu epais, convexe, elliptique, ovale, attenue posterieure- ment; epiderme noiratre, presque lisse ; nacre d'un violet tres-fonce, bord brun-mat ; longueur 1-2, diametre 1-4, axe 1-5 de la largeur. Appartient au sous-genre Ellipsaria. Jolie espece a belle nacre ; largeur trois pouces ; dans le Ken- tuky, etc. ; lame carenee, droite ; fossule eonfluente ; impressions profondes ; dents ridees. 69. Espece. Obliquaria Cliffordiana (Unio Cliffordiana). Obliq. Cliffordienne, Test epais, bombe, ovale, arrondi, grande longueur posterieure ; 64 * rafinesque's [322] talus posterieur ; nacre presque lisse, noiratre, pourpree-pale ; lon- gueur 3-4, diametre 2-5, axe 1-4 de la largeur. Appartient au sous- genre Plagiola. (Yoyez p. 302.) Du museum de M. Clifford ; trouvee dans le Kentuky ; largeur 3 ponces ; lame courbee, epaisse, ridee ; fossule apparente ; dents strides ; sommets a peine saillans, ecorclies, a nacre plane, safranee. EEMARQUES. 1. Le ligament que j'ai decrit est le grand ligament p6sterieur ; il y a en outre dans toutes ces coquilles un ligament anterieur mem- braneux et foliace qui est tres-petit et court dans les coquilles alonguees ou arrondies, et plus grand ou oblong dans les coquilles elliptiques ou dilatees. 2. Ayant mieux observe I'espece 48 Ohovaria pachostea (voyez p. 312), j'ai reconnu qu'elle appartient au genre Amhlema, auquel il faudra reunir. Yoici son caractere : Amhlema Antrosa. Test tres-epais, un peu bombe, arrondi, flexueux, a petit sinus lateral inferieurement ; epiderme brun, 1am- elleux ; nacre violacee, pale, ondulee et a grande cavite sous la dent bilobee ; largeur 6-T, diametre 1-2 de la longueur, axe presque terminal. [From the Annals of Nature, or Annual Synopsis of new Genera and Species of Animals, Plants, &c. First Annual Number, p. 10, Philadelphia, 1830. ] [10] YIII CLAS. APALOSIA.— THE MOLLUSCA. XVI. N. G. Philomycus. Differs from Limax by no Tisible mantle, the longer pair of tentacula terminal and club shaped, the shorter tentacula lateral and oblong. — The name means friend of fungi, on which they feed. 69. Philomycus quadrilus. Grey, back smooth, with four longi- tudinal rows of irregular black spots, long tentacula black and ap- proximated : rather attecuated behind, tail obtuse. Ou the banks of the Hudson, length over half an inch. 70. Philomycus oxyurus. Fulvous grey, slender, back wrinkled longitudinally ; tentacula brown, the lateral ones very small ; tail acute, carinated above. — Length two-thirds of an inch, in New York. CONCHqi-OGICAL WRITINGS. 65 71. PMlomycus fuscus. Entirely brown, tentacula thick, back smooth, tail compressed, acute. — In Ohio, on Amanita elliptica ; length one fourth of an inch. 12. PMlomycus Jiexuolaris. Fulvous, back variegated with flexuose brown lines, slightly wrinkled transversally ; attenuated behind, tail obtuse. — Length from one to two inches, it may change its shape. Found on the Catskill mountains. There are many other species of this genus in the United States. XVII. N. Gr. EuMELus. Differs from Limax by no visible mantle, the four tentacula almost in one row in front and cylindrical, nearly equal, the smallest pair between the larger ones. — Name mythological. 73. Eumelus nehulosus. Body nearly cylindrical, rounded at both ends ; back smooth, crowded with grey and fulvous spots inter- mixed of the same tinge, without spots beneath ; tentacula brown. — Length about one inch ; in Ohio and Kentucky. 74. Eumelus lividus. Livid brown above, greyish beneath, antenna black, obtuse behind, back smooth and convex. — Length one inch ; in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky. 75. Limax gracilis. Body slender, head and lower tentacula fulvous, neck grey, upper tentacula brownish, mantle dark fulvous, back smooth brown, beneath dirty white ; tail brown, obtuse above, mucronate and acute beneath. — Probably a real Limax. Yet it has the two long tentacula inserted above the neck, while the small ones are terminal, and all slightly club shaped. It may perhaps form a sub-genus Deroceras. Length over one inch. Found near Hen- dersonville in Kentucky, and in woods. XVIII. K G. Hemiloma. (Univalve land shell.) Spire raised and smooth ; opening obliqnal elliptic, with an interior raised half margin on the inside lip, a httle twisted ; Columella decurrent on the whorl obliquely and with a very small umbilicus. — The name means half margin. 76. Hemiloma ovata. Ovate, very obtuse, smooth, six spires, breadth two-thirds of the length. — Found near Lexington, in nearly a fossil state, by Mr. John D. Clifford ; whitish, length three- sixteenth of an inch. [11] 77. Pleurocera verucosa. Ellipsoidal, top very obtuse, base of the opening obtuse, inside lip thickly plaited ; four spires, the two E 66 kafinesque's last flattened, the other large, with several rows of warts, back of the opening wrinkled. — Length about two-thirds of an inch, not quite double the breadth; colour olivaceous brown, opening whitish. It lives in the lower parts of the Ohio. This genus which contains nearly twenty species of fluviatile shells, was described in my 70 N- G. Animals, &c. I have discovered already about one hundred and eighty species of fluviatile and land shells in the United States. [From Enumeration and Account of some remarkable Natural Objects in the Cabinet of Prof. Rafinesque, in Philadelphia, page 2. Philadelphia, November, 1831. [2] lY. FOSSIL UNIVALVE SHELLS. 13. ERPILITES, Raf. N. G. or perhaps a S. G. of Trochites. Opening oval, subquadrangular by the end being nearly truncate, columella with a twisted fold and ending with an acute point. All the sp. from the limestone and sandstone of Ohio and Kentucky, where other Univalves are very rare. I have T sp. at least, and shall here describe 5 of them. The name means creeping. Although these shells are marine, they appear to approximate very near to the Pleurocera and Ilelania, now living in the Rivers of the same region. 14. Eijnlites Maltistriata, Raf. 1818. Suboval, 3 spires with many spiral ribs and minutely striated obliquely. Fine perfect speci- men from sandstone of Knobhills, one and a half inch long, with crystals inside. 15. Erpilites Platenia, Raf. 1820. Broad depressed, 3 spires smooth, the first very large with a broad biangular flat raised band, becoming a spiral angle in the other spires. Large sp. two inches broad, silicified, from the limestone. 16. Erpilites Ohiensis, Raf. 1818. Suboval, 5 spires smooth, each ending by a spiral angle on the upper edge. Limestone of Ohio State, one inch. lY. Erpilites Garinafa, Raf. 1818. Oblong smooth, 5 spires carinated in the middle spirally. Near Lexington in limestone, small, half an inch, seldom petrified. 18. Erpdlites Stenotenia, Raf. 1821. Oblong smooth, 4 or 5 spires with a narrow depressed spiral band. Limestone of Kentucky. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 6T V. FLUYIATILE UNIVALVE SHELLS. 19. Pleurocera Gonula, Raf. 1818. Seven spires, the first with two or three small angles, the others with only one. River Ken- tucky. My G. Pleurocera, 1819, is perhaps a S. Gr. of Melania, [3] but the animal is different, with lateral feelers ; the shell is always conical oblong with the opening oblong oblique acute at both ends, columella flexuose twisted. 20. Pleurocera Acuta, Raf. 1818. Shell elongate very acute, smooth, nine spires, the first angular in front. Lake Erie. 21. Pleurocera Quadrosa, Raf. 1816. Conical, smooth, six spires, the first with an obtuse circular angle, and a furrow below it, giving the opening a subquadrangular appearance. Small streams of West Kentucky, one inch long. 22. Ilelania Rugosa, Raf, Pyramidal acute, nine spires rugose vertically, streams of Cumberland Mountains. I leave the name of Melania to the shells with opening obtuse at the end, or they may form the S. G. Amhloxus. 23. Ilelania Viridis, Raf. Suboval smooth, five spires, end obtuse, opening oblong. Fine shell, one inch, green, from Licking River. VI. LAND UNIVALVE SHELLS. 24. APLODON, Raf. 1819. Differ from Eelix by an ombilic and a callous tooth above it in the opening. Several sp. 1. A. nodosumi, Raf 1818. Subdepressed, rugose below concentrically, 3 nodose spires. In Kentucky. 25. STENOSTOMA, Raf 1819. Differ from Helix, opening linear with lips, upper lip notched, lower carinated. 1. St. convexa, Raf. Nearly round, both sides convex, smooth, 5 spires. Kentucky. 26. TOXOSTOMA, Raf. 1819. Differ from the last, by no lower lip nor keel to the opening, which is curved. 1. T. globularis. Globular smooth, 5 spires. In Kentucky. 27. MESODON, Raf. 1819. Differ from Helix by lower lip with a tooth. 1. 31. maculatum. Depressed, hardly striated, upper lip reflexed, tooth careniform, 5 spires. Fulvous with brown spots. The G. Trophodon differ from this by upper lip notched. The G. Odomphium by having an ombilic. 28. OMPHALINA, Raf 1819. Differ from Helix by no lips; 68 bafinesqtje's but an ombilic. Many sp. 1. 0. cuprea. Suboval, 4 spires, smooth, brittle, diaphanous coppery, shining, opening very large. In Kentucky. 29. TRIODOPSIS, Raf. 1819. Diifer Helix, opening with 3 teeth. 2 above, 1 below, an ombilic. 1. Tr. lunula. Depressed, mouth narrow with thick lips, ombilic lunulatcd. In Kentucky. Forms S. G. menompliis. 30. XOLOTREMA, Raf. 1819. Differ from the'last by no ombilic, opening linear. 1. X clausa. Subdepressed, 5 spires a little striated, opening almost hidden. I have many more land and fluviatile univalves, too many to enumerate here ; but I add two beautiful Agatinas from the south. 31. Agatina VariegatajJiaf. 1820. Six spires, smooth, yellowish, variegated with brown spots near the sutures, first spire with some narrow coloured strias concentric Nearly two inches, from Louisiana. 32. Agatina Fuscata, Raf 1822. Eight spires, smooth, reddish brown, with broad longitudinal black bands on the spires, of a lan- ceolate flexuose shape. Over two inches. From Texas. Both col- lected by Dr. Strong. YII. FOSSIL BIVALVE SHELLS. S3. Mytilus exotilus, Raf. 1820. Oblong oboval, minutely striated, strias broader below, curved near the sides. Breadth two thirds of length, thickness 4-9. From the limestone near Boon creek, Ken- tucky, petrified, over 2 inches. 34. APLEUROTIS, Raf. 1819, and tract of October, 1831. K G. very near mytilus, but winged and perforated. 1. AjjV.pectenoides, Raf. Oboval, upper valve convex striated, wing well marked, lower valve flat, scarcely striated. Breadth 4-5 of the length, which is over 2 inches. 2. Apl. pusilla, Raf. Oblique oboval, flattened, minutely striated, wing sniall. Breadth | of the length, which is less than one inch. Both. from Knobhills of Kentucky. 36. OXISMA, Raf. 1819. K G. near Finna. Base truncate, [4] end gaping, equivalve, hinge lateral plicate on one valve, angular on the other. 1. 0. bifida, Raf. Shell bifid by valves acute and gaping before, outside black and rough, sides straight, length 3-8 of the breadth, hardly one inch. Knobhills. 3T. Terebratulites Eriensis, ^0.1 1818. Base smooth, remainder CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 69 \^ith concentric wrinkles, large valve with a depression and sinus. Length 4-5, thickness 2-5 of the breadth. From the limestone of Lake Erie and Ohio, silicilied blackish, about one inch. 38. STROPHOMENES, Raf. 1820. See tract of October. L Str. levigata. Yery smooth, longer valve convex, lower valve con- cave, corners acute, not auriculate, contour arched and even. Length 4-5 of the breadth. Kentucky limestone. 2. Str. Jlexilis. Yery thin, lower valve hardly concave with minute curved strias, upper valve convex with minute fiexuose strias, corners acute subauriculate, length and breadth equal. Limestone of Ohio, 1 or 2 inches. 40. CURYULITES, Raf. 1819. Inequilateral, inequivalve, valves elongated, curved or crooked, larger valve broader, the smaller often angular. 1. G. striata, Raf 1818. Cuneate curved, base narrow, end broad rounded, striated longitudinally, short alternate strias near the end. In the Kentucky limestone, 2|- inches. 41. ZONARITES, Raf. Tribe of Atremosia or imperforated Terebratulites. Shell subtransversal equilateral, subinequivalve, both valves convex with thick concentric wrinkles, hinge linear, beaks very small. 1. Z. atrata. Nearly rounded, with large wrinkles and furrows between. Length 5-6 of the breadth, thickness nearly half. Perfect black shell silicified, nearly one inch, from the Knobhills, disc, in 1822. 42. Zonarytes? Tesselata, ^at Rounded, tesselated by concen- tric and longitudinal wrinkles and furrows. Length 7-8 of the breadth. From the Knobhills, one inch broad, has only 1 valve incrusted in quartz, and with the hinge too imperfect to refer it decidedly to this Genus. [Continuation of a Monograph of the Bivalve Shells of the River Ohio, and other Rivers of the Western States. By Prof. C. S. Rafinesque. (Pub- lished at Brussels, September, 1820. _) Containing 46 Species, from No. 76, to No. 121. Including an Appendix on some Bivalve Shells of the Rivers of Hindostan, with a Supplement on the Fossil Bivalve Shells of the Western States, and the Tulositcs, a new Genus of Fossils. Philadelphia, October, 1831.] [1] Hardly a dozen species of North American fluviatile bivalve shells, had been mentioned by Rose. Lamark, »Say, and Lesueur, before 1820, when I described, in a special and ample Monograph, 15 species of them ! with 40 varieties, mostly discovered by myself, in TO rafinesque's my travels of 1818 and 1819, and figured 28 of them. This labour ■was written at Lexington, in January 1820, and published in French, at Brussels, in September 1820, in the General Annals of Physical Sciences, by Bory and Drapiez, and also in a separate pamphlet. I stated then, that several other species existed in the Western Waters, but described none but those I had before ray eyes. I have, how- ever, diligently collected these additional species, in my successive travels between 1820 and 1826, and have thus added, at least 40 species to the 75 already described ; some of which, must also form peculiar Genera, or Sub-genera, particularly the Lasmonos, which fills the gap in the variety of hinges. We have thus five different tribes of Bivalve shells. 1. Unio. Hinge, with a cardinal tooth and a lamellar tooth. 2. Alasmodon. Hinge, with a cardinal tooth only. 3. Lasmonos. Hinge, with a lamellar tooth only. 4. Anodonta. Hinge, without teeth. 5. Cyclas. Hinge, with two lamellar teeth. My labor on this branch of conchology, of which I was the pioneer and first historian, has attracted a great deal of attention in Europe, and latterly, also, with us. I was repeatedly asked for the shells I had discovered and described ; I disposed of some rare ones, for the Museum of my friend Clifford, in Lexington, and for the Museum of Transylvania University. I furnished several to my friends, Elliot, Collins, Graham, Hart, &c., in America, and Eerusac, Brnogniart, Swainson, Sowerby, &c., in Europe. Meantime, I have lately found that these fine shells have acquired a great value in Europe, and some have sold at very high prices in England, Germany and France, while I have seldom derived any profit from them, but much trouble, expense, and even vexation. I am determined to dispose of none left me, but for sale ; I have as yet 400 specimens, or 60 species, of ray Monograph in my cabinet, and all those described in this continua- tion, about 96 species in all, which I value from one to five dollars each ; and even 5 species at ten dollars or more, being perhaps unique specimens. I offer them for sale, and have begun to sell upwards of 50 to Mr. Ch. A. Foulson, for his fine cabinet in Philadelphia. Some of these shells are so very rare, that I have only met them once in 4,000 miles of travels and explorations ; others I have never seen, except in collections, such are the Unio ridibundus, and the CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 71 Alasmodon complanatum, for instance. I sliall describe here, only those which / have now before my eyes, and with the names given them ten years ago, at their discovery ; I have seen a few others, which I delay to describe, not having them now in my hands. Those who shall purchase these new shells, may have the pleasure to give splendid figures of them, if they like. Since 1820, several American Conchologists have attempted to notice, describe, or figure these shells ; Barnes, in 1823, Lea, Say, and Eaton, later still. They had a fine field before them, in elucida- ting them by good figures, and describing the new kinds ; but led astray, by various motives, they have neglected to verify, or properly notice my previous labors, although they were knoivn to them. Mr. Say is, above all, inexcusable. I had respectfully noticed, in 1820, his previous labors ; but he has never mentioned mine, and knows so little of the animals of these shells, as to have mistaken their mouth for their tail, and their anterior for the posterior part of the shells ! If he had seen these animals alive, feeding, moving, and watched their habits as I have done' repeatedly, he would not have fallen into such a blunder. The mouth is always near the cardinal tooth, and the lamellar tooth is to the right of it in the right valve, to the left in the left valve. — Others pretend that my monograph is too intri- cate ; it is the subject which is such ; whenever many species belong to a tribe, many divisions and sections are needed to elucidate and isolate the species. All the great naturalists know and do this. The works wherein their erroneous labors are found cost above $100 I (mine only 50 cents.) This has put it out of my power, as yet, to verify all their mistaken and synonymous names. A complete synonymy of these shells will soon be required, which I may perhaps undertake in future, unless it is done by Mr. Poulson, v/ho has trans- lated and means to publish my monograph of 1820. This continua- tion will be a supplement to his translation. I mean to give in it my shells under my own names, imposed as soon as found in 1821 and 1822 chiefly, the undoubted right of a previous discoverer and explorer. If some of them are already well named and described, let their names be compared and the oldest or best prevail, as those of my old Monograph ought in all cases. C. S. R. Philadelphia, Oct. 1831. 72 rafinesqxje's I. TRIBE.— UNIO. 1. N. G. Epioblasma. Differs from Amblema and ElUpsariahj lamellar tooth obliqual, divergent towards the back and straight. Axis nearly terminal. The TJnio or Amblema torulosa. Sp. 55, perhaps belongs here also. 16. Sp. Utiio hiloha or Epioblasma biloba, discovered 1821. Elliptical, both ends rounded, back convex, belly bilobed, sides rugose, more or lessgibbose, swelled before, greenish brown outside^, bluish white inside. Breadth 2-3, diameter 2-5 of the length. Var. 1. Pallida not greenish, rufescent, a little longer. In Green river and Kentucky river, about 3 inches long. Remark- able species, very rare, summits prominent, teeth striated, the lamel- lar short, reaching only to the middle. 2. N. G. ToxoLASMA, Differs from Amblema, Plagiola and Sin- toxia, by lamellar tooth not obliqual but arched parallel with the back, axis nearly terminal, general form rounded, back curved. 7t. Sp. Unio cyclips. ( Toxolasmacyclips. — 1820.) Shell thick rounded-elliptical, swelled subglobose, subrugose and yellowish out- side, incarnate inside. Breadth 6-t, diameter 4-8 of the length. Axis 1-1 0th. Yar. I. Fuscata. Larger, brown outside, and nearly smooth, whiter inside, longer lamellar tooth. Var. II. Lutescens. Yellow outside, bluish white inside. River Ohio and Mississippi 2 to 4 inches, beautiful nacre, lamellar tooth cariuate, serrulate as in many other species. It is said that this is the U. abruptus of Say. I cannot see any thing abrupt in it ; my name means Round Ellipsis. 18 sp. Unio cinerescens ( Toxolasma ditto. — 1820.) Shell thick, rounded oboval, a slight posterior obliqual ridge, nearly smooth and cinerescent brown outside, bluish white inside. Breadth 8-9, diameter 5-9 of the length. Axis l-9th. River Ohio and Kentucky. About 2 inches, cardinal tooth much striated, lamellar not serrulate. 19 sp. Unio lividus, {Toxolasma do. 1822.) Shell elliptical swelled not thick, outside subrugose, brown, inside livid purplish. Length 3-4, diameter 3-8, axis 1-4 of the breadth. In Rockcastle river, exceedingly rare. — Size only one inch, lamel- lar tooth long, thin curved, not serrulate. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. TS 80 sp. Unio Jiexus. [Toxolasma, ditto, 1821.] Shell thick rounded, swelled, undulate below ; outside subrugose, olive brown, inside bluish white. Length 5-6, diameter 1-2; axis l-6th of the breadth. In the Kentucky river, rare, 1 or 2 inches, lamellar tooth w^ell curved, thick ; not serrulate. 3. ^N". G. Bariosta. Form of Scalenaria, lamellar tooth curved, and not obliqual, as in Sintoxia, shell transversal, triangular, 81. Sp. Unio ponderosus. (Bariosta ditto, 1820.) shell very thick and heavy, oval triangular, rounded before, curved slope behind, with an oblique ridge ending to a point, a sinus next to it ; outside rough and blackish ; inside incarnate, iridescent, uneven. Length 3-5, diameter 2-5, axis 1-4 of the breadth. In the lower Ohio and Mississippi. Fine shell, with beautiful nacre, 3 to 5 inches broad ; cardinal tooth striate, lamellar tooth scabrous ! Many uneven wrinkles inside. The U. sinuata Sp. 67, belongs to this section, Bariosta having a similar lamellar tooth: but it is broader, more elliptical, without ridge, and white inside ; the sinus is also more central. 82 sp. Unio vittatis (Lampsilis? vittata. — 1818.) Shell oval, swelled, rather thin, broad subulate and subtruncate behind with two or three oblique ribs longitudinal, rounded and rugose before, sides smooth, outside olivaceous, radiated with narrow straight greenish rays, bluish white inside. Length 3-4, diameter one half, axis one third of breadth. In Green river, 3 inches broad or more. Very near my Lampsilis fasciola, sp. 26: — but it is larger, rounder, with straight rays. Cardinal tooth crenulate, lamellar tooth not flexuose, but well curved in the right valve ; short, compressed, truncate behind. 83 sp. Unio montanus, {Eurijnia montana, 1823.) Shell thin, elliptical, compressed, behind broad a little winged, end truncate, outside nearly smooth brown, a little laminated and fulvous around, inside bluish. Length one half, diameter and axis 2-5 of breadth. In the streams of the Alleghany and Cumberland mountains. About 2 inches. Lamellar tooth very long, nearly straight, a sinus above it. 84 Sp. Unio diploderma, (Lampsilis ditto. 1822.) Shell thin elliptical, hardly swelled ; back hardly broader : surface a little 74 rafinesque'S ribbed with a double epidermis, the outer rufous, the inner green- ish : inside bluish purple. — Length 7-12, diameter 1-3, axis 1-4 of breadth. In Salt river, rare, small. If inch ; cardinal tooth almost as in Leptodea, lamellar tooth well curved, and flexuose. 85 Sp. Unio diajohanus, (lletajjfera ? diaphana 1821.) Shell very thin, transparent, oval-elliptic, swelled, broader behind, with a small wing, surface smooth horny, inside, pale incarnate. Length 3-4, diameter and axis 3-8 of the breadth. Var. lineolata \{\i\i ful- vous greenish lines. Iq, small streams of Kentucky, one or two inches, rare, cardinal tooth compressed, crenulate, lamellar well curved. 86 Sp. Unio lasmabrachys (Iletaptera'? do. 1820.) Shell rather thick, oval triangular, swelled, truncate behind with an arched ridge, surface rugose horny, inside bluish white, small truncate wing, beaks prominent. Length 5-7, diameter 3-7, axis 2-7 of the breadth. Licking river, &c., 3 or 4 inches, rare, deep cavity inside: teeth wide apart, cardinal crenulate, lamellar very short, broad and trun- cate in the right valve. This and the last belong more to Metaptera by the teeth than the wings. 87 Sp. Unio rimosus, {Eur-ynia rimosa. 1823.) Shell elliptic, thick, thinner, broader, and rimose behind; surface olivaceous nearly smooth, inside bluish white. Length 2-3, diameter 1-6, axis 1-4 of length. In the Cumberland river, rare, small H inch. Resembling some Aniblemas, but evidently transversal, cardinal tooth crenulate, lam- ellar smooth, short, nearly horizontal, but a little curved towards the back. Perhaps a peculiar S. G. near to Epiohlasma, it might be called Lemiose. 88. Sp. Unio fulvus. {Euryniafulva. — 1823.) Shell elliptical, thick before, sloping behind, surface depressed nearly smooth, bright fulvous or rufous outside and inside. Length one half, diameter and axis one fifth of the breadth. Var. 2. Fttscata, brownish rufous outside, pale inside. Yar. 2. Rvfa, quite rufous outside, iridescent inside. In Green river, Rockcastle river, &c., — rare, fine shell, 2 or 3 inches, cardinal tooth crenate, lamellar long and straight. Near to my U. auraius. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 15 Gr. Obliquaria. 89 Sp. Unio calendis, (Obliq. calendis. — 1821.) Shell thick and swelled, rounded, subtruncate behind, surface with broad flat wrinkles. Length T-8, diameter 1-2, axis 1-5 of the breadth : outside yellowish, inside iridescent and uneven. In Dick river, &c. Fine sp. beautiful nacre, rare, 2 inches. Near to U. cyclips, but smaller, less round, lamellar tooth quite oblique, slightly curved as in the Plagiola, cardinal tooth striated ; proba- bly a Sintoxia. 00 Sp. Unio Venus, {Obliquaria Venus — 1820.) Shell oval elliptic, thick and swelled, truncate behind with transverse wrinkles, outside neai'ly smooth, of a reddish chesnut colour, inside lilac irides- cent. Length 3-4, diameter 1-2, axis 1-3 of the length. In the Kentucky and Cumberland, very rare, 3 inches wide ; the prettiest of all the Unios, resembling a Yenus. Lamellar tooth thick erose obliqual. My Unio Elliptica sp. 8, is very near to this : both are of S. Gr. Aximedia. 91 Sp. ?7?n'opZafeoZws, (Obliq. ditto. 1823.) Shell rather thin, broad, elliptic lanceolate, attenuate and subacute behind, very com- pressed or nearly flat, outside brown nearly smooth, inside bluish. Length one half, diameter and axis 1-5 of breadth. At the falls of the Cumberland. Small, 2 inches, rare. Akin to U. cuprea. Cardinal tooth small, bilobe, lamellar obliqual short. 92. Unio teneltus, (Obliq. ditto. 1822.) Shell elliptic thin, nearly equilateral, quite flat, margin erose, outside minutely striated, oliva- ceous with square green spots, inside bluish. Length 4-T, diameter 1-T, axis 3-7 of the breadth. Exceedingly rare, seen only once in a stream of the Knob-hills of Kentucky. Size one inch. It is an Aximedia which is to be a S. G. of Obliquaria. Lamellar tooth obliqual very short, cardinal bilobe small as in Leptodea. 93 Sp. Unio hicolor, (Obliq. ditto. 1821.) Shell thick elliptic, lanceolate, attenuate and subtruncate behind, with an obliqual ridge, outside brown nearly smooth, inside yellow above, white beneath. Length 1-2, diameter 1-3, axis 1-5 of breadth. In Kentucky river, 3 or 4 inches, akin to U. dilatata, but smoother inside, difi"erent nacre, axis more anterior : more rare and beautiful. Lamellar tooth obliqual thick. — The U. dilatata is however also an Obliquaria and may be called Obi. violacea. * 16 rafinesque's 94 Sp. Unio pallens, (Obliq. ditto. 1821.) Shell thick com- pressed, perfectly elliptic, both ends equal, hardly subtruncate behind, outside smooth pale yellowish, inside white. Length 3-5, diameter 3-10, axis 1-5 of the breadth. Ohio and Kentucky, rare, 2 or 3 inches. Lamellar tooth a little obliqual, short and thick, in the left valve furrow closed as in the G. Obovaria and Rotundaria. Yet an Elliptio which is the same as Ellipsaria. 95 Sp. Unio rivularis, (Obliq. ditto. 1821.) Shell rather thick swelled, perfectly elliptical, slightly arcuate below, outside brown and smooth, inside, bluish. Length 4-t, diameter 3-7, axis 2-7, of breadth. In the small streams of the Knob-hills and Cumberland mountains. Very small, hardly one inch. Lamellar tooth as in sp. 93. — Near to U. sinuata, sp. 67. 96. Unio fontinalis, (Obliq. ditto. 1823.) Shell thick, rounded, triangular, svib-truncate behind ; quite rounded before and below ; outside smooth, yellow, with some green spots ; inside bluish white. Length 4-5, diameter 3-5, axis 2-5 of the breadth. At the spring of the source of Green R. in the Knob-hills, rare, very small, like a Cyclas ; but belong to S. G. Scalenaria, lamellar tooth obliqual, straight, short. [4] 97 Sp. Unio chJoris, (Obliq. chloris. 1823.) Shell oval obliqual, rather thick, and swelled ; the 3 sides rounded, outside greenish and smooth, inside bluish iridescent. Length 4-5, diameter 3-5, axis 1-5 of the breadth. Small streams of Knob-hills. Minute shell, next to U. calendis Sp. 89, but distinct, lamellar tooth more curved, and not bisulcate. Both are Sintoxia. 98 Sp. Unio castaneus ; [Obliq. and Aximedia, 1823.] Shell rather thin, oval, elliptical, swelled, nearly equilateral, broader be- hind, outside very smooth, and chesuut colour ; inside, bluish white. Length 4-5, diameter 3-5, axis 3-7 of the breadth. Knob-hills streams, in east Kentucky. — Yery small, lamellar tooth suboblique, thin. Perhaps a variety of U. lenigata. Sp. 9. G. Truncilla. , 99 Sp. Unio j^ierplexus. (Tr. perplexa, 1830.) Shell rather ubov'al, slightly swelled, only subtruncate ; rounded below, outside CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 77 dlivaceous, with narrow black lines, inside incarnate, iridescent. Length 3-4, diameter 1-3, axis 2-5 of the breadth. Apex not prominent. In the river Kentucky, about one inch, I have called it perplexing, because it deviates much from the other Truncilla, approximating to Scalenaria and Plagiola, but the hinge is like Truncilla. 100 Sp. Unto granulatus. (Tr. granulata, 1821.) Shell thick, subtriedral, very much swelled, rounded below, posterior truncature nearly flat, subtesselate, granular ; outside smooth, olivaceous, with broad blackish bands, inside bluish white. Length 1-2, diameter 1-2, axis 1-3 of the breadth. Apex slightly cordate. In Salt river, rare, above one inch. Nearest to Tr. Triqueter, but less cordate, less tesselate, with granulations instead of warts behind. Not flexuose below, as Tr. truncata. Lamellar tooth very short. 101 Sp. Vnio metaplata. (Tr. do., 1822.) Shell thick, subtried- ral, much swelled, broad and curved below, posterior truncature nearly flat, hardly tesselate, subgranular above ; cuticle yellowish, inside bluish white. Length 3-4, diameter 5-8, axis 2-5 of the length. Apex deeply cordate. Yar. I. ViUata, with black bands. In the Cumberland and Green Rivers, very rare; the largest Truncilla, often 2 inches, lamellar tooth crenulate, as in Tr. truncata. Sp. 19. N. B. Besides these 26 newUnio, I find in my notes the account and figures of several others, such as U. pustulatus, U. jounctatus, U. scaber, U. elegans, U.badius, U. cre?iK/rt^»s, &c., but not having now the specimens before me, I must delay their publication. Of my previous species of 1820, but few are found in Lamark last edition of 1819. My Z7. latissinia is, perhaps, his U. recta. 1 found only 3 names, of diflferentsp. from mine, clashing by similarity, U. retusa, U. siniiata and U. depressa. I have thus changed mine in consequence. My U. retusa, 1820, is now my U.p>reinorsuif, my U. depressa 1820, is my U. compressus ; my U. sinuata 1820 is my U. cultratus. Lamark and myself gave feminine terminations to our Unios ; they are now generally made masculine, as I do here ; but this difference is of little account. The comparative proportions of the length, breadth, diameter, 18 kafinesque's and axis of the Unios and other bivalve shells, having been misund^- stood by some, it may be needful to state that my formula is a kind of abbreviation of a longer exposition. Thus when I say, length one half, diameter one third, axis one fourth of the breadth — I meant to say, and I must be understood to state the fallowing longer account : — Ihe length of the shell is one half the diameter is one third, and the axis is at one fourth of the whole breadth, or largest dimensions of the shell. In longitudinal shells this is reversed, the length being the longest dimension, becomes the size of comparison. I onght to have added to the names of our late writers on JJnio, Mr. Hildreth, who has described over again a few of my species, and Prof. Eaton, who I regret to say, has, (in his Zoological, Text- Book, Albany, 1826, now before me,) noticed 33 species of JJnio and Alasmodon of Say and Barnes, but none of my previous ones ! and put them all back to the old genus Mya of Linneus ! This, as well as his whole Zoological book, proves that he is forty years back- wards in the science of Zoology, as he is 30 years backwards in Botany, and about 20 in Geology. But this is not peculiar to him, it is the fate of one half of our Naturalists, Botanists and Geologists. The daily increase of knowledge and improvement in science is despised or neglected by them as useless innovations ! While all the world, and all the sciences move forward, they would keep those they teach or cultivate at a stand ! it is all in vain, and time will show it. II. Genus or tribe Alasmodon, This fine tribe of shells of which I knew only 2 species in 1819, was found rather prolific in species in 1820 and 1821. I ascertained then that it was also to be divided into several genera (subgenera or sections) offering many different peculiarities in the hinge. I have therefore established the following 4 genera with it. 1. Lasmigona. Cardinal tooth knobby, crenate and decurreut before. Lamellar tooth remplaced by an horizontal angular pro- jection, flat above. 2. Amblasmodon. Cardinal tooth knobby, crenate and decurrent before. X/amellar tooth remplaced by an obtuse oblique knob, a furrow between it and the ligament. CONCnOLOGICAL WRITINGS. TO * 3. I)ECURAMBts. Cardinal tooth bilobe flexuose enamelled, de- current on both sides, decurrence on remplacing the lamellar tooth behind, no angular knob to it. 4. SuLCULARiA. Cardinal tooth small striated decurrent before, separated by an oblique furrow from a small oblique projection [51 remplacing the lamellar tooth, with a small fold in it. All these shells are transversal and inequilateral ; I have seen none yet longitudinal as among the Unios : most of the species are ribbed behind. The A. complanata of Say, must form another peculiar Genus, which I propose to call Pterosyna ; having the united wings behind of the Genus Metaptera. The 2 Alasmodon of my monograph belong to the G. Lasmigona. 102 Sp. Alasmodon ^^onderosum, (Lasm. ponderosa, 1820.) Elliptical, very thick, somewhat swelled, truncate and broadly ribbed behind : yellowish arid laminated outside, white and uneven inside. Length 3-5, diameter 1-3, axis 1-3 of the breadth. In lower Ohio and in the Mississippi. — Large heavy shell, five to six inches broad, roughly rugose outside by their concentric lamina. Cardinal tooth nearly trilobe, lamellar angle obtuse, confluent together. If these characters of the teeth should separate it from the Las- migona, it may be called Gonamblus. 103 Sp. Alasmodon rugosum (L. rugosa. 1823.) Shell thick elliptical, hardly swelled, subtruncate behind, broad ribs behind and below, subsinuate below, outside rugose and olivaceous, white and nearly even inside. — Length 3-5, diameter 1-4, axis 3-4 of breadth. Tennessee river, rare, 5 to 6 inches broad. Akin to the last, but more flat, less thick and heavy, teeth different, cardinal smaller not trilobe, angular projection less obtuse, with a wrinkle and small tooth at the base. 104 Sp. Alasmodon sulcatum, (L. Sulcata. 1823.) Shell thick, elliptical and swelled, posterior slope with broad ribs, surface oliva- ceous with large sharp concentric ribs and broad furrows between, inside white incarnate. Length 1-2, diameter 1-3, axis 1-4 of the breadth. River Tennessee and Mississippi : fine large shell, 6 inches broad, beautiful nacre ; cardinal tooth crenate, the angular projection acute before, obtuse behind. Beak or apex a little prominent and slightly rugose. Very rare. 80 rafinesque's 105 Sp. Alasmodon viridis (L. viridis disc. 1820.) Shell thin swelled, subelliptical, quadrulated, posterior slope slanting truncate without ribs : outside greenish, nearly smooth, inside bluish, with flexuose wrinkles. Length 1-2, diameter 1-3, axis 1-3 of the breadth. Yar. I. Chloris. Bright green. Yar. II. Radiata. Olivaceous with green rays. Yar. III. Fuscata. Brownish. In the Ohio and other streams. So much like Unio viridis out- side as to be easily mistaken for it. Tooth small bilobe crenate, angular projection sharp with a wrinkle or furrow. One or two inches broad. 5 N. Gr. Amblamodon. 106 Sp. Alasmodon hians {Amhlasmodon Mans, 1823.) Shell thick; much swelled, elliptical, subobliqual and gaping, margin flex- uolate, posterior slope with broad ribs. Outside rugose and yellow- ish brown, inside even pale incarnate. Length 7-20, diameter 2-5, axis 1-4 of length. River Tennessee, fine rare shell, 5 inches broad. Hinge quite peculiar, cardinal tooth not lobed, large subcrenate, large oblique knob on the projection decurreut, twisted and curved behind. 6. N. G. Decurambis. 107 Sp. Alasm. scriptum {Decuramh'is literata disc. 1822.) Shell rather thin, subelliptical, very much swelled, truncate behind, nearly flat with transverse furrows and ribs, subsinuate beneath. Outside smooth greenish with blackish spots like capital letters! — inside bluish. Nearly equilateral, apex ardate. Length and diameter one half, axis 5-12 of the length. In Green river. Wonderful shell, exceedingly rare and strange, outside form of a Truncilla, 2 or 3 inches broad. Tooth flexuose trilobe compressed, decurrence befid before. Certainly a peculiar genus. 108 Sp. Alasm. atropjurp)ureum {Decurambis ditto, disc. 1823) Shell rather thin, elliptical, hardly swelled, smooth and not truncate behind, subsinuate beneath : outside rugose, blackish purple, quite inequilateral, apex hardly cordate. Length one half, diameter and axis one third of the breadth. In the river Cumberland, very rare, 3 inches broad. Tooth flexuose subtrilobe, hardly prominent. Yery distinct from the last, although a true Decurambis. CONCIIOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 81 T N. G. SULCULARIA. 109 Sp. Alasm. badium {Sulcularia hadia disc. 1821.) Shell thiu, suboval, truncate obliqually behind, back straight, rounded beneath, outside smooth bay with some faint bands, inside pale bay or rufous iridescent. Length 2-3, diameter and axis 1-4 of the breadth. Small streams of the Knobs, rare, one or two inches : tooth obtuse, projection very small. 110 Sp. Alasm. papyraceum (Sulcularia jyapyracea disc. 1821.) Shell very thin and flat, elliptical, broader behind, truncate crenate with furrows and broad ribs : outside olivaceous a little uneven, inside bluish. Length one half, diameter 2-9, axis one fourth of breadth. In East Kentucky. Yery rare ; 2 or 3 inches, tooth short and wide, projection with an oblique fold ; the posterior ribs are seen both outside and inside. III. Genus or tribe Lasmonos. 8 N. G. Lasmonos. Cardinal tooth none, remplaced by a sinus, a flat tubercle, and a decurrent enamel. Lamellar tooth curved following the beak. General form of Ilelaptera with a small coales- ■cent wing. Ill Sp. Lasmonos Fragilis disc. 1822. — Shell very thin, depressed, suboval, broader behind, with a small wing, some nodulo- sites behind, outside smooth olivaceous, inside purplish blue. Length 3-5, diameter and axis 3-10 of the breadth. In East Kentucky, very rare, 2 or 3 inches wide. Yery singular shell, which I mistook at first for a Metaptera ; tubercle of the hinge hardly visible, lamellar tooth very long, close to the back, bifid at the end in the left valve. Type of a new Genus which may include other species when sought for in the south west. lY. Genus or tribe, Anodonta. 112 Sp. Anodonta inflata. disc. 1S22. Shell thick, elliptical ; somewhat attenuated behind, very much swelled, summits wrinkled, subprominent, outside olivaceous, wrinkled, inside white iridescent. Length ^3-5, diameter 2-5, axis 3-10 of the breadth. F 82 rafinesque's Var, 1. Viridis. Green outside. Var. 2. Fuscata. Brown outside. Var. 3. Zonalis. Witli green and brown zones. River Kentucky and Green, the largest and finest sp. of the West, reaching 5 and 6 inches, hinge almost without any visible fold. 113 Sp. Anodonta digonota. (Lastena digonoia, 1826.) Shell thin, oval swelled, back straight, obliqual, with two angles, one before and one behind, similar to small wings, sloping behind, with a flexuose edge ; outside laminated, pale, olivaceous, inside bluish white, iridescent. Length 5-8, diameter 3-8, axis 1-4 of the breadth. From Lake Erie, two inches, hinge inside, with a flexuose fold, separated from the straight back. Perhaps a peculiar S. G. FlexipUs. I have besides, another doubtful Anodonta ; A. riifa, probably a var. of ^, ohiensis, sp. 58. V. Genus or tribe, CYCLAS. I have no new sp. of Cyclas ; but I am enabled to present a beau- tiful new genus of this tribe, which forms the passage between Unto and Cyclas. ' I call it Dvplasma, meaning double lamellar teeth. The specimen before me, was not collected by myself; it belongs to the cabinet of shells of Mr. Hembel, of this city, who has had the goodness to lend it to me. It is labelled Unio, and is supposed to come from the river Tennessee, which I am inclined to doubt, because I have in my cabinet, a specimen nearly alike, from the river Ganges, collected by Dr. Burroughs, and because the G. Diplasma appears to be Asiatic. I therefore suspect that this species of Mr. Hembel, is also from Hindostan, and shall therefore include it in the following APPENDIX. On eight Asiatic bivalve fluviatile shells. These shells were all collected in the rivers of Hindostan, by Dr. Burroughs of this city. They appear very different from our North American shells, forming even often peculiar genera. They are 3 sp. of Diplasma, 1 sp. Loncosilla, 2 sp. Lampsilis, and 1 Ohliquaria. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. SS' 9 K G. DIPLASMA. Shell inequilateral and transversal, hinge with two lamellar teeth, nearly confluent, united into a curve, not serrulate, more or less unequal, bilamellar anteriorly in the right valve, bilamellar poste- riorly in the left valve. Certainly a distinct Genus, more like Cyclas and niria, in the hinge than Unio, although so labelled by 'Dr. Burroughs and our conchologists, by the external form merely. I suspect that many Asiatic Unios belong to it. I shall describe 3 of them, besides our doubtful American species. 114 Sp. Diplasma marginata. Shell thin, elliptical, swelled, back horizontal, sloping and truncate obliquely behind ; outside very smooth, shining brown, anterior and interior margin yellowish, inside pale incarnate. Length one half, diameter 1-3, axis 3-10 of the breadth. From the river Tennessee, as stated to Mr. Hembel, but so near the next, that the fact appears doubtful to me ; perhaps the locality has been erroneously stated or labelled in Mr. Lea's cabinet, from whence the shell is said to have come, and it may be also a shell from Hindostan. Lamellar tooth properly curved, the anterior pretty long. Size of the shell over two inches. 115 Sp. Diplasma similis. Shell very thin, elliptical, not swelled, back horizontal, truncate obliquely behind, hardly sloping, outside smooth, dark olivaceous, with a pale margin, inside bluish incarnate. Length T-15, diameter 4-15, axis 1-5 of the breadth. From the river Ganges, so similar to the last as almost to appear the same, yet thinner, flatter, and teeth somewhat diiferent, forming almost an angle rather than a curved arch, anterior tooth shorter, oblique, the posterior perfectly horizontal. Length nearly two inches. 116 Sp. Diplasma vitrea. Shell very thin and brittle, almost transparent, oval swelled, broader behind, with a slope outside, very smooth, greenish, or fulvescent, inside whitish, teeth subequal. Length 2-3, diameter 2-5, axis 2-5 of the breadth. From the river Jellinghy in Bengal. Small, hardly over one inch, fine delicate shell. 11*7 Sp. Diplasma striata. Shell thick, suboval, swelled, behind sloping subtruncate and transversally striated, outside olivaceous greenish, smooth below, but longitudinally striated above ; strias in S4 rafinesque's a zigzag form in the middle, inside silvery white, teeth subequal, much curved. Length 2-3, diameter 2-5, axis 5-12 of the breadth. Also from the river Jellinghy. Small, hardly one inch. This and the last agree in many points, and might form a peculiar sub- [7] genus Hemisolasma, having shell ovate, axis submedial, lamellar teeth subequal. 118 Sp. JJnio fulgens, \_Lampsilis fulgens.'] Shell thick, elliptical, swelled, attenuated behind, outside nearly smooth, laminated, ferruginous brown ; inside of a beautiful metallic incarnate and iridescent. Length 1-2, diameter 1-3, axis 1-5 of the breadth. From the river Ganges, two or three inches, beautiful shell, a true Lampsilis, with a long flexuose lamellar tooth subcrenulate ; cardinal tooth compressed crenulate. Anterior fossule, very conspicuous below the anterior impression. 119 Sp. Unio Ai-gyratus, [^Lampsilis argyratus.'} Shell thin, elliptical, swelled, attenuated behind, outside laminated greenish, decoricated and silvery at the summit, inside bluish irides- cent. Length 1-2, diameter 1-3, axis 1-16 of the breadth. Also from the river Ganges. Size one and a half inch. Very near to the S. G. Leptodea, but teeth as in the last, cardinal small crenulate, lamellar less flexuose, not crenulate. In both the teeth are wide apart as in all the Lampsilis. 120 Sp. Unio corrugata, of the authors from the river Baramputra, it is an Obliquaria, very near to my U. Venus and U. Elliptica, S. G. Aximedia. In Mr. Poulson's cabinet, I have not yet been able to determine precisely whether it is well named, and not having the specimen before me, I cannot describe it. 10 N. G. LONCOSILLA. Shell transversal, unequilateral, somev^'hat gaping, only one mus- cular impression anteriorly. No teeth as in Anodonta, but a hinge with a marginal nerve, or fold anteriorly ; distinct from the margin, and a little obliqual behind. Ligament small at the very summit. — Animal unknown. A distinct genus of the tribe Anodonta, which had been mistaken for a fluviatile Solen by Dr. Burroughs the discoverer of it ; but all the Salens are marine shells. The name means little knife ; it is different from all my S. G. of Anodonta. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 85 121 Sp. Loncosilla solenoides, or Anodonta solenoides. Shell elliptic, somewhat swelled, both ends rounded and a little gaping, back horizontal, outside and inside smooth and whitish. Length 1-3, diameter 2-7, axis 2-7 of the breadth. From the river Jellinghy in Bengal. Small, seldom one inch long. Posterior nerve of the hinge short. Addition.— 11th X. G. DIANISOTIS. The examination of these Asiatic shells, enables me to affirm decidedly that the Symphonola hialata of Lea is also a peculiar genus, very different from our Metaptera, nearer to Hiria and Diplasma. I have seen it in Mr. Poulson's cabinet, and ascertained that it has, like Lasmonos, a lamellar tooth on each side, forming a curve as in Diplasma, but these teeth appear simple, not forked, and the two unequal ears, [whence my name] or wings distinguish it as Metaptera from Unio, and Pecten from Ostrea. I propose to call it Dianisotis chinensis, as fizaZato is not a speci- fic but generic character. I could see no cardinal tooth. SUPPLEMENT On the Fossil Bivalve Shells of the Western Region. Almost all the fossil bivalves of the western states from Ohio to Alabama, belong to the great order of Terebratulites or rather Brachiopites, whose animals of G. Brachiopus were very different from those of the living bivalve shells, having ciliate limbs. My monograph of 1821 contained 23 genera, all new except five [and about 80 species] and five others had already been published in 1819 by me in my account of 70 N. G of animals. Journal de Physique. I propose to give an epitome of this monograph which I have not yet seen in print. I possess nearly all the shells. They are found in the secondary strata of limestone, slate and sandstone which extend from Lake Erie to the Gulf of Mexico, in horizontal strata, the limestone being the lowest, and the sandstone the highest, form- ing in many parts hills and ridges from 100 to 500 feet high. They are very rare in the slate. Order BRACHIOPIA. Animal brachiopus when living, brachiopites when fossil. Shell bivalve, animal within having a bilobed mantle, and two thick ciliate arms or limbs. 86 rafinesque's I. Family, LINGULARIA. Shell equivalve, longitudinal, inequilateral, valves entire, not perforated, 1. G. Lingula of Brugiere. II. Family TEREBRARIA. Shell inequivalve, one valve per- forated or emarginated. 1st Section, Ilacrilia. Shell longitudinal. 2 G. DicLiSMA, Raf Equilateral, the two valves split at the summit. 3 G. Apleurotis, Raf 1819. Inequilateral, the great valve per- forate, and with a lateral wing, 4 G. Trigorima, Raf Equilateral, smaller valve perforate, four cavities- at the base separated by three septa. 6 G. Obovites, Raf Equilateral, the great valve perforate. 6 G. Magas (Sowerby) equilateral, great valve with an angular opening. 2d Section, Idlia. Shell equilateral, nearly equital or hardly transversal. "7 G. Terebratula (Brugiere) great valve perforate. 8 G. Spinifer (Sowerby) subequital, great valve with an angular opening, hinge with two spiral appendages. 9 G. GoNOTREMA; Raf Shell subtransversal, small valve with aa angular opening, and interval cavity, hinge short, straight or curved. 3d Section, Platilia. Shell equilateral, transversal or very broad. [8] 10 G. Platilites, Raf Small valve with an angular opening and internal cavity, hinge very long, often longer than the shell which is thus winged. 11 G. Pleurinia, Raf Differ from last by the great valve per- forate, shell winged also. 12 G. Pachiloma, Raf Inequilateral, with thick edges, hinge with a linear opening. 13 Strophomenes, Raf. Equilateral, hinge broad, great valve notched by a lunulate sinus receiving a lunulate projection of the smaller valve. III. Family ATREMOSIA. Shell inequivalve, valves entire, not perforated. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 8T 14 G. Orbicula (Cuvier, Lamark.) Shell orbicular, one valve fiat and one conical. 15 Gr. Sti*ophesia, Raf. Shell orbicular equilateral, beak curved in the great valve. 16 Gr. Diclijisifes Raf. Differs from last by hinge short and straight ; no proeminent beak. 17 G. Trunculites, Raf. Subequital, valves convex, equilateral, nearly equal, hinge short and truncate. 18 G. Productus, (Sowerby,) Equilateral, winged, or rather auriculated, one valve convex, the other flat or convex, hinge linear. 19 G. Stl/riasis, Raf. Differ from last by great valve, with a pro- jecting cruciform appendage on the beak. 20 G. Goniclis, Raf. Shell longitudinal, great valve concave inside, with a longitudinal angle outside. 21 G. Ilegarites, Raf. Shell longitudinal, equilateral suborbicular, valves nearly equal, both convex with concentric ridges, hinge like a linear horizontal fissure. Most of the species belong to the following Genera. Obovites — 6 sp. Gonotrema — 15 sp. Platilites— 13 sp. Shophomenes — 16 sp. In a supplement of March 1821, I added 2 N". G. 22 G. Amblotrema, Raf. Differs from Gonotrema by the opening or perforation, being oval or oblong, and obtuse. 23 G. Pleuranisis, Raf. Differ from Platilites by having the shell inequilateral. The geological age of these shells appears the same as that of the oldest fossils, Madreporites, Turbinolites, Encrinites, &c., being found together and promiscuously in the same strata, or in diluvial debris ; but the different genera and species are not found together, sometimes they are wide apart, or very rare ; they are mostly silicified. 88 rapinesque's [From the Atlantic Journal and Friend of Knowledge. No. III., page 116 Philadelphia, 1832.] [116] 14. LuciLTTES Nigra, a new v.nivalve fossil Shell, from the Alleghany Mountains of Pennsylvania. By C. S. Rafinesque. This pretty fossil is in the Cabinet of my friend Hayden, in Balti- more, who found a single specimen of it, on the side of a limestone cliff" at Bedford Springs, in a valley of the Alleghanys of S. Penn- sylvania. It was taken 60 feet from the ground. It is the most shining fossil Shell which I have seen, almost as if recent, whence I have called it Lucilites or shining fossil. Its black color very un- natural among shells makes a fine contrast with the dull blue lime- stone in which it is fixed. It belongs to the familly of Patellites, and [117] only differs from Patella, by being elliptical and smooth, without radiations. G. Lucilites Raf, Simple univalve pateloid shell. Elliptical entire, outside convex smooth without radiations, inside concave smooth. No openings or fissures. Sp. L. nigr-a. Black shining outside, both ends equal obtuse. Length double of the breadth. Over half an inch in the specimen [From the Atlantic Journal and Friend of Knowledge. No. III., page 121. Philadelphia, 1832.] [121] PSEPHIDES PaRADOXA. '22. CoNCHOLOGT. — A Neiv Tubular f^^esh ivater shell of the Alle- ghany Mts. 1 was much gratified to find this year a new fluviatile shell of the simple tubular form ; but the animal was not within. It was found in Sherman creek, a mountain stream of Perry County, Pennsylvania, among the AUeghanies. This strange shell has something mysterious in it. It appears a mass of gravel ; strongly cemented, even holding sometimes minute fossil terebratulites and other fossils. It is not therefore the tube of CONCHOLOQICAL WRITINGS. 89 a Phryganea. Since they are all brittle, arenaceous or membrana- ceous. Yet the worm that forms it and dwells in it, (as no mollusca form tubular shells) is unknown, and I was told none has ever been seen in it. A singular idea was suggested to me by Prof. Green that it mjght be a fossil's shell ! Since it is found in a rich fossil [122] region ; and has a stony appearance ; but being found free, in the water or on the banks of the stream, and never imbedded in stones it can hardly be so. The subject must remain doubtful, until other consimilar Genera are found. Meantime I give a figure of it, and its description ; whereby it appears to approximate to the Sabel- lites and other tubular annelides, perhaps also to my G. Potami- phiis of the R. Ohio, published in 1819, whose worm I detected; but its shell is arenaceous open at both ends and operculate before. My name of PaepJiides means gravelly tube. PsEPHiDES. Cylindrical tubular shell, open before, closed behind, opening round entire, inside smooth hard stony, outside entirely formed by cemented gravel and little shells. Psephides paradocca Raf. Uncial, diameter equal throughout, about one sixth of length and obtuse, inside brown, outside versi- color. — Length less than one inch. The gravel of the outside is of all colors, formed by small angular fragments of shale, slate, clorite. quartz and othev stones seldom found in Sherman Creek.' and even entire fossil shells or fragments of fossils. C. S. Rafinesque. Fossils of Sherman Creek. I have discovered this year, this new locality for fossil remains, and collected abo-iit 50 sp. in a tract of 5 miles near the Kennedy Springs, in the Quaker hills and Mt. Pisgah forming a geological basin of red, yellow, brown and white sandstone, gravel or pebble stone and conglomerate, holding chert of all colors. The fossils are found in all, and even the chert or Petrosilex. They are of the oldest formation. I mean to give hereafter a full account of this fine oryctological region and all the fossils collected in it. I shall here merely indicate them. Most of them are new. Vegetable fossils. Fucites 2 Sp. Animal fossils. Porostomites 2 Sp. Encrinites 2 Sp. Turbino- lite 1 Sp. 90 rafinesque's Fossil shells. Orthoceratite 1 sp. Gryphites 3sp. Diclisma 3 sp. rroductus 6 sp. Terebratiilite 8 sp. Eiirytes 3 sp. Gonotrema 2 sp. Diclipsites 4 sp. Triinculites 3 sp. Pleureterites 10 sp. &c. This last is a fine N. G. quite prolific in sp. it difi'ers from Pro- ductus by being inequilateral. Nay it may be the type of a new tribe, since one sp. which I have called PI. stellata having a bilobed hinge and a quadrifid shell might also, form a peculiar G. Eemiste- rias quadrifida. C. S. R. [From the Atlantic Journal and Friend of Knowledge. No. IV., page 142. Philadelphia, 1832.] [1491 New Fossil Shells of Pennsylvania, by C. S. Rafinesque. Among the 40 N. sp. of Bivalve fossils found this year on Sherman cr. in the Alleghany mts. I select those which are unequilateral as the most curious, and I shall describe 10 of them giving above the figures of 1, ranged under 3 new genera. All are Inequivalve. 1. N. G. Hemisterias Raf Shell transversal with 2 wings thus unequilate- ral, hinge with 2 teeth and an angular sinus outside at the beak, margin lobed — -~H. quadriloha fig. 1. Four obtuse lobes and 3 obtuse sinusses, lateral lobes like wings one much longer, an oblong furrow on each lobe, length half of breadth. 2. N. G. Telistrophis Raf. Shell unequilateral transversal with one wing on the longest side, hinge without beak, straight with a round impression inside at the apex, margin unlobed — T. Un^sala fig. 1. Shell convex, minute longitudi- nal curved strias, short side rounded, long side with a twisted obtuse wing, length 2-5ths of breadth. — Impression in Petrosilex, one inch, 3. N. G. Pleureterites R. Shell unequilateral transversal with- out wings, hinge more or less curved simple or with a wrinkle and a beak, margin unlobed. — The name means irregular sides, Telistro- 2)his means spotted hinge, and Hemisterias means half starry — 8 sp. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 91 1 Sp. PI. lateridria R. fig. 2. Shell oblong, small side smooth, longer side with 5 transversal furrows, axis far behind, length one third of breadth — In petrosilex, one inch long. 2 Sp. PL divisa R. Shell oblong divided in the middle by a large furrow and small sinus at the end of it, 5 curved ribs on the small side, t on the large divided by deep furrows, small side rounded, longer attenuate, axis proeminent submedial, length half of breadth. In grey petrosilex, over one inch. 3 Sp. PL anisocta Raf. Shell swelled rounder, a deep furrow in the middle, 8 curved unequal ribs, 4 on each side, small side round, longer side truncate, beak proeminent submedial, length 3-4ths of breadth. In variegated petrosilex, about one inch. 4 Sp. PL latiundata R. fig. 6. Shell oblong both ends obtuse, 3 [143] or 4 broad waved ribs, margin flexuose, beak submedial, length 2-5 of breadth. With the last larger. 5 Sp. PL striata R. Shell oblong, swelled both sides rounded, hinge flexuose by arched beak, equal longitudinal strias throughout, beak submedial, length half of breadth. In white sandstone, nearly two inches. 6 Sp. PL hifasciata R. fig. 4. Shell rounded swelled, smooth with two faint transversal bands or wrinkles, beak round lateral, length 2-3ds of breadth. In yellow sandstone, small, half an inch. 1 Sp. PL concentrica R. fig. 5. Shell oval, minute concentric strias, beak obtuse at 1-3, sides rounded, length 2-3ds of breadth. In petrosilex. 8 Sp. PL obliqua R. fig. 3. Shell oval oblique swelled, 8 carved oblique furrows, 3 and 4 on the sides of. the middle one, beak pro- eminent at 1-3, length 2-3 of breadth. In grey chert or uetrosilex, small half an inch, near to sp. 3, but less deeply furrowed not trun- cate behind. [From the Atlantic .Toumal and Friend of Knowledge. No. IV., page 154. Philadelphia, 1832.] [154] CoNCHOLOGY. Two New Bivalve Fluviatile Shells of S. America, By C. S. Rafinesque. These two fine shells are from the Cabinet of Professor Green, who permitted me to draw them and describe last March. They are both from the R. Parana above Buenos Ayres. 92 rafinesque's 1 Anodonta aperta Raf. Oval elliptical much swelled, broader behind and slanting, very smooth and dark brown outside, quite gaping below, iridescent white inside. Length and diameter ^ of breadth, axis at \. Flue large sp. 6 inches broad, shell rather thick, beaks proeniinent, not gaping at the ends but below ; hinge streight slanting ending in 2 small angles, no wrinkles on it, but slightly , Ilexuolate beneath. 2. Unio paplios Raf. Oval, flexuose and subtruncate behind, with an obliqual ridge from the beak, brown outside with many minute coucentric strias, inside purplish white. Length 2-3, diameter T-iS, axis at 1-3 of the breadth. Pretty sp. 2 inches broad, shell rather thin for TJnios, lamellar tooth slightly curved, cardinal tooth sub- bilobe crenate. Beaks not prominent. ODATELIA N. G. of N. American Bivalve jluviatile shell. By G. S. Rafinesque. One of our Ohio shells, which has been put with the Unios or Anodonta by different writers ; it was unknown to me till I observed it in Prof. Green's cabinet, and I immediately ascertained that it must form a N. G. or group between Anodonta and Sulcularia. I call it Odatelia meaning imperfect teeth. Odatelia Raf. Cardinal tooth imperfect like a callosity, with a large desinense as in Alasmodon, becoming an imperfect lamellar tooth angular as in Lasmigona This G. must belong to the series of Anodonta, but forms the passage with Alasmodon. How Say and Lea could put it with Unio! is rather strange. Odatelia radiata Raf. Elliptical flattened elongate, broader behind with subtruncate end, outside olivaceous brown, with black rays, inside bluish iridescent. Length 1-3, diameter 2-9, axis at 2-9 of the length. LJnio Oriens. Lea. Unio dehiscens. Say. • Anodonta prelonga. Green. Breadth over 2 inches, shell rather thin both ends rounded and brown. [From the Atlantic Journal and Friend of Knowledge. No. V. page 165. Philadelphia, 1833.] r3.651 On 3 N. G. of Land Shells froin Buenos Ayres in South America. By C. S. Bafnesque. They arc:' rom the cabinet of Prof Green, where they are not labelled, and wlio permitted mc to describe them. CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 93 1. Siphalomphix, Raf. N. G. shell conical, opening oval acute, end rounded, columella twisted with a tubular ombilic. It differs from Agathina by the columella and ombilic. S. bonariensis Raf. or Ag. bonariensis, Raf. Six spires tip nearly obtuse, first spire with a transversal angle — shell about one inch long, whitish semi-transparent, brittle. 2. Stegomphix, Raf. N. G. shell oval opening nearly round lips not quite joined, the internal covering a small spiral ombilic. — There- fore different from Cyclostoma and Paludina. St. elegans, Raf. {or Gyclostovia) oval with 5 spires, white, end nearly obtuse yellow, spires with many small prominent transversal strias. — One inch long or less very pretty. 3. Biplicaria. Shell oval, opening pval, columella broadly plaited with 2 folds or thick oblique ribs. — Near Voluta and Torti- cella, but not marine. D. bonariensis, Raf. Oval obtuse smooth olive color with 2 spires only — small shell of half inch. On five New Fresh Water Shells, of Bengal and Assam in Asia. They have been collected by Dr. Burroughs and are in my cabinet. 1. Planorbis albescens, Raf. nearly smooth whitish flattened on the right side with 3 raised spires, only 2 on the left in a hollove, opening hardly oblique. Size above half an inch. 2. Paludina v'ltula, Raf. oval conical acute, 5 spires, swelled before, olivaceous with narrow spiral brown bands. — Size about one inch long. 3. Paludina fragilis, Raf. oval swelled acute, 5 spires, smooth [166] brittle, of a uniform dark or pale horny color. — Smaller than the last. 4. Melania tessula, Raf. oblong, brown, seven spires, somewhat tesselated by prominent ribs and small spiral strias, about one inch long, I have 3 varieties. 1. first spire with duplicate strias — 2. do. single strias, knobby tesselate shorter. 3. do. strias nearly obliterated. Are they different Sp ? 5. Melania costula, Raf. elongate, olivaceous brown, 7 or 8 spires, all with regular angular ribs lengthway, the first spire with a spiral angle ending at end of opening. Over 1 inch, from the river Gauges. 94 rafinesque's [From "The Good Book and Amenities of Nature, or Annals of Historical and Natural Sciences." Philadelpliia, 1840.] [63] 12. On the 3 Genera of Gephalopodes, OcYTHOE, ToDARUS and Anisoctus. My G. Ocythoe altho' adopted by Leach and others, is yet a pro- blematical animal for many, and I find even in late Journals discus- sions on its being or not the animal of the Argonauta shell — it would be wiser to ask me (the original discoverer) for my opinion or ex- perience — I once wrote to Leach obout it, but it was during his sickness, and I believe he omitted to publish my remarks, which were at variance with his. It is time therefore to settle this question, or rather throw new doubts on it perhaps ; my recollections of my Ocythoe are quite vivid as a very remarkable animal. I omitted in my short account of the Genus (in my precis of 1814) to state the size of this animal, and thence have originated many wrong surmises. I did not state that it was the animal of the Argonauta since I never dreamt of such a thing, knowing the Todarus as the animal often found in it, (in Sicily,) while the Ocythoe never could dwell in it, being larger than a man^s head, and weighing 15 pounds. Such was my Ocythoe tuberculata type of the genus and certainly not the same as that of Leach : this animal was brought to me alive in 1811 as a rare kind of Octopus, it was ferocious, endeavoring to bite and wound the holder, although out of water for one hour : it [64] changed color, like a Chameleon from white to red in its angry and dying moments. It was killed as usual with the Octopus by turning its head, a process well known to the Fishermen of the Mediterra- nean : else they will live long out of the water and are dangerous till dead. I did eat this Ocythoe which afforded a meal for many, and it was as good as usual with the Octopus. The Fishermen never told me that it dwelt in the Argonauta, while all deemed their Todaru the animal of it, calling the shell and animal by the same name, while the Ocythoe was called Pulpu. I do therefore aver that my Ocythoe is not the animal of the Argonauta, and could never be, by its size and thick spherical body, unfit even to enter it. Not so with the Todaru, which was merely indicated in my .precis as the Loligo todarus ; but I have since deemed it a Genus, called CONCHOLOGICAL WRITINGS. 95 Todarus argo, as it differs from Loligo by the 2 superior Antenopes having a cuneiform wing or broad membrane, yet it has the body of Loligo, with 2 posterior round wings, and an internal Aploste, linear subulate thin and flexible. This animal is exactly of the size and flexible shape suitable to enter the Argonauta and dwell therein : although I never was sure that it was the real producer of the shell — the fishermen asserted it, it is met floating with it and using its 2 winged feet as sails, I had it caught and brought to me with its black eggs filling the bottom of the shell — and yet I never was positive as to being the real mysterious Argonauta. I was once inclined to believe it, but the animal was so different from that described by Montford and others, its body was so unlike the fluted shell, that I always had great doubts. [65] It is well known that many shells of Argonauta are blackened in their inner apex : this happens by the black eggs laying there, although the Todarus has not the ink bag of the real Loligos, yet it emits a kind of dark liquor and its eggs are blackened by it. I incline to believe that it uses the shell as a home, boat and nest, at the time of laying eggs, and changes the shell yearly. It has no kind of adhesion to it, and may be entirely withdrawn with ease. I give here the figures of both Ocythoe and Todarus argo. This last is fulvous grey above, white beneath, body oblong sihooth, 2 rows of alternate cupules on the antenopes that are shorter than body, but promuscides as long without cupules. A third Genus medial between these two was found by me in the Atlantic Ocean in 1815, and I procured 2 sp. of it, both pelagic, floating at the surface. I called it Canopus then, but this name being employed I have changed it to Anisoctus mg 8 unequal. G. Anisoctus Raf. dilTering from Octopus by body as Loligo with a very small subulate aploste (internal bone) but 8 unequal Ante- nopes, as in Octopus. 1. Anisoctus punctatus Raf L. body whitish dotted of brown, Antenopes cylindrical coiled at the end, 2 longer, 2 shorter, cupules alternate — 5 inches long. 2. Anisoctus 6«coZor Raf. -body bay above, white beneath, ante- nopes trigone acute nearly equal cupules alternate — 1 inches long. Figure 50, Ocythoe tuberculata. 96 ■ rafinesque's Figure 51, Todarus argo. Pig. 52, 53, Anisoctus punctatus and bicolor. [66] 13. DiTAXOPUS PARADOXUS, a new Fossil G. of Gephaloj)odes, discovered 1819 — Figure 54 and 55, Shell and Animal. This was one of my most remarkable discovery in fossil Zoology, among the Wasioto hills of Central Kentucky. While breaking many fossiliferous flints of that Region, I fell upon one having in the centre, a perfect hollow mould of a Univalve shell, shaped between Haliotis and Carinaria, and containing inside a delicate flinty Animal almost perfect, of the most extraordinary shape. It was however evidently a Cephalopode, since the cupules were con- spicuous on the Antenopes ; but these were not around the head or body, somewhat as in the Cirrhipedes or Terebratules although not articulated as in these. It is difficult to convey a proper idea of this strange animal, but the figures will explain it better. I carefully put up the fragments of the Stones together, and pre- sented this unique specimen (worth 50 dollars) to my friend John D. Clifford for his Museum, where it was preserved, and is perhaps yet in this ^collection, (since gone thro' 2 or 3 hands) if not stolen or broken. I sent descriptions and figures of it to Cuvier and Brongniart, but have not heard if they published them. This discovery is of double importance, because it links with the rare G. Carinaria, of which the animal is as mysterious as that of the Argonauta, and may lead us to detect a new order of the Cephalopodes class, distinguished by a single elongate branched antenope. I gave it the name of Ditaxopus, meaning 2 rows of feet. [67] Description. Shell univalve ovate patent smooth with a small obtuse knob of spire at base, and an obtuse keel behind, — Animal, body amorphous in the fossil state, ending in a long curved limb with above about 6 pairs of antenopes in 2 rows, opposite curved or coiled, the upper longer, all obtuse cylindrical with 2 rows of alter- nate cupules or tubercles inside. Found near Estil, Gritstone hills of Central Kentucky imbedded in fragments of flint or chert. Size over one inch. The shell was destroyed ; the fossil being of the very oldest formation. II^rDEX. Abretia, 10.16 Anodonta cataracta, Say, 59 Acarda, Brug, 21 " cygnea. 59 Acephalia, 14 " (Lastena) iignota, 82 Acera, Cuv, 16 iuflata, 81 Achatina Lam, 17 ■' " var fuscata, 82 Adelobranchia, 17 '• '■ " viridis, 82 Agatina, 93 " '• " zonalis, 82 " bonarieusis, 93 •' (Lastena) lata. 69 " fuscata, 68 •' marginata Say, 59 " variegata. 68 " mutabilis, . 59 Ageuor, 16 " ohiensis. 59,82 Alasmidia, 60 " var. nigresceus, 59 Alasmidonta, 60 " " radiata. 59 " coBtata, 60 " violacina, 59 " marginata, 60 " " viridis. 59 AlasDiodon, 29, 36, 70, 78,93 " prelongaG reeu, 92 " (Decurambis) alropur puieum, SO " radiata. 59 " (Pulcularia) badium. 81 '' rufa. 82 '• complanatum, 71 " Solenoides 85 " (Amblasmodon) hians, 80 " undulata, Say, 69 " (Sulculana)papyraceum, 81 Anodontidia, 58 " (Lasmigona) ponderosum 79 Anomia, L, 21 " " rugosuin, 79 Anominia, 21 " Scriptum,. 80 Antepedia, 14 " (Lasmigona) sulcatum 79 Anthiope, 18 " " \'iridis, 80 Anthronacus, 15 " var. chloris, 80 Apalosia, 13 ' " fuscata, - 80 Apleurotiib. 24,30,68,86 " " radiata, 80 " pectenoides. 30 Amathouta, 19 " pusilla. 30, 68 Amathusia, 19 Aplodon, 18, 24, 28, 67 Amblasmodou, ■ 78, 80 " nodosum, 28, 67 Amblema, 29, 48, 57, 72 Area, 20,30 " antrosa, 64 Arcaria, 20 " ovalis, 29 Arcula, 20 Amblemldia, 54 Argonauta, Lam, 15,94 Amblotrema, 87 Argonautea, 15 Ambloxis, 23,24,67 Argus, Poli, 21 " eburuea. 23 Armina, 12,16 " ventricosa, 23 " maculata, 12 Amesoda, 61 " tigrina. 12 Amithaon, 18 Arthemis, Poli, 20 Ammonites, Biug, 15 Artbromium, 21 Ammonoceratites, Lam, 15 Arthronotus, 17 Amphibulia, 17 Ascidia, 31 Amphibulimns, Lam, 17 Asepia, 13 Amphirea, 16 Asiphonia, 20 Amphrisus, 16 Aspbalium, 12 AmpuUaria, 18,27 Atremosia, 86 Anatina, Lam, 19 Atromopsis, 13 Anaulax, Boissy, 19 Aulisa, 15 Ancilla, Lam, 19 Avicula, Lam, 20 Ancylidia, 17 Aximedla, 41,75,84 Ancylus, Geof, 17,24,27 Axinea, Poli 20 Anisoctus, 94.93 Baculites, 15 " bicolor. 95,96 Barioeta, 73 " punctatus. 95,96 Belemnita, Lam, 16 Anodonta, Brug, 20, 29, 36, 58 59 70.84,92 Belemnitee, 24 " anatina, 59 Biphora, Cuv., 21 " apena 92 Bivalvia, 14 " atra, 59 Blephalum, 16 " cuneata. 59 Bolina, 18 INDEX. Brachlopea, Brachiopia, Brachiopus, Brandaiis, Bucarda, Brug.. Biiccinidia, Buccinum, Bulimus, Brug., Bulla, Linn., BuUaria, Bullea, BuUinia, BuUinitia, Byssil'erla, Calceola, Lam., (lalceolina, Callianira, Pen- v., Callista, Poli., Callitriche, Poli., Calyptraea, Lam., Cameola, Campeloma, Campytus, Canalifera, Cancollaria, Laui., Canopus, Capsa, Lam., Capsalu, Bosc. Capsaria, Cardita, Brug., Carinaria, Lam., Carychiuui, Mull., Cassina, Cassis, Brug., Cephadelia, Cephalopodia, Ceramiis, Cerastes, Poli., Cerithium, Brug., Chama, Linn., Chimera, Poll., Chimotrema, Chiton, L., Chitonia, Cleodora, Ptirry., Clio, Linn., Clio, Brown, Clione, Cliouidia, Closterita, Clytiana, Codostoma, Columbella, Lam., ( olyma, Concholepas, Lam., Conchulus, Conospira, Conulia, Conulus, Conus, Liuu., Corhicula, Megerle, " tluviatilis, Corbula, Lam., Cornucopia, Thompson. Crania, Lam , Cranicella, Crassatella, Lam . Crenatula, Lam., Crepidula, Lam., Crostoma, Cteniurus, Cuculiua, CucuUea, Lam., Cumerina, Curvula, " dubia, 21 " levis, ' 85 " plana. 85 " striata. 19 Curvulltes, 20 " striata, 19 Cyoladea, 19 Cycladia, 17, 24 Cyclas, 20, 29,36 17 " Caroliniana, 17 • " crassula. 17 ■' dubia, Say, 17 " - (Phymeroda) equalis. 17 " lacustris. 20 " lasmampsis. 21 " olivacea. 21 Cyclemis. 9, 16 Cyclips, 20 Cyclostoma, 20 Cydippa, 17 Cylindulus, 21 Cymbium, 'za Cymbulia, Perry., l.i Cyphoxis, 18 " cardites. 19 " lunula. 95 " pulla. 20 " veneriua. 17 Cypraea, Linn., 20 Cypridia, 20 Cytheria, Lam., 10,1.5,96 Cyrtodaria, Daud., IS Cytonotus, 18 Dagysa, L., 18 Daphne, Poll., 14 Dasauus, 14 lo DecurambLs, " literata, 20 Delphinula, Lam., 18 Dentalia, 21 Dentalium, Linn., 20 Deroceras, 28 Dianisotis, 17 " chinensis, 17 Dicerata, Lam., 10, 15 Dicladus, 10 Diclipsites, Its Dicli.sma, 10 Dicroptera, lli Dictyethis fu«ca, 15 Diodiphus. 16 Diomphala, 1.3 Diophthelis, Ifl Dipla.sma, IS " maigiuata. 17 " similis. 17 " srtiata, IS vitre;t. 19 Dipliciuia, 19 " iKjuarit-uais. 19 Diplicella, 61 Diplophonia, til Dipsas, 21 Discolita, 15 Di.scorbitus, Lam., 21 Ditaxopus, 21 " paradox u 20 Ditrema, 20 Diurichu.s, 17 Dulabella, Lam., 21 Dolium, Lam., 10, Id Uonax, Brug' , 20 Doridia. 20 Doris, Liuu., 15 Dotona, 24, 30 Dyetiethis, 30 Eburnea, Lam., 20 61 42,61,70,82,83 61 26 61 61 61 61 26 25 75 18, 28, 93 16 19 l5 10, 15 24,30 30 30 30 30 19 19 20 19 15 21 20 17 79,80 SO 18 12 12 65 85 85 21 16 87,90 86,90 10, 16 II 13 19 21 82, 83, 85 ■ 83 S3 83 83 93 93 18 19 60 15 15 96 96 12 21 17 19 20 16 16 16 16 19 INDEX. Echion, Poli., 21 Hemisolasma, 84 Egeria, Boissy, 20 Hemiloma, 65 Eione, 10,16 " ovata, 65 Ellipsarii, 47. 63. 76 Hemistena. 60 EllipBtoma, 2.S. 24, 27 Hemis'eria, 90 ' gibbosa, 23,27 " quadrifida, 90 " marginula, 27 " rinadriloba, 90 " rugosa, 23 Heicynia, 17 " vittata, 27 Heterocarda. 20 " zonalis, 27 Heteioperia, 20 " zonalisa, 23 Heteroptera, 10,16 Elliptic, 29. 37, 46, 76 Hiatella,Daiid., 20 Eltrostoma, 18 Hipponea. 17 Emarginaiia, IP Hippopus, Lam . 20 Emarglnnia, Lam., 17 Hippothoe, 16 Endotoma, 24,28 Hippui'ites, Lam., 15 '• product!. 28 Hyalea, 10,15 Enipeiis, 16 Hyalinea, 15 Eolia, Cnv., 16 Hyplaxus. 17 Epioblasma, 74 Hypogidia, 19 Erodona, Daud , 20 Hypiortomus, 21 Erpilites, 29,66 Hypterus, 10,11,16 " carinata, 29,66 " appendiculatus, 11 " multistriafa, 66 " eiythrogaster, 12 •' Ohiensis, 66 Hypterns, 10,16 Platenia, 66 Hyria, 83, 85 " Stenotenia. 66 Involvea, 19 Erycina, Lam., 20 Iphitus, 16 Espiphylla, 26 loeranea, IS Nympheola, 26 Isilia, 86 Etheria, Lam., 21 Isocardia, Lam., 20 Eumelus, 65 Isoperia, 29 " lividus, 65 Janthina, Lam., 17 " nebulosus. 65 Juturna, 18 Enomphalus, 24 Lampsilis. 43,82 Euphemus, 18 Laphrostoma, 18 Euphurus, 16 Laphyra, 17 Eurynia, 42 Laplysia, L. 17 Euiystoma, 24 Laplysinia, 16 Eurytes, 90 Lasmigoua, 78, 79, 92 Eutrema. 27,29 Laemono!!, 70, 81, 85 " terebroides, 27 " fragilis, 81 Exaithria, 13 La.stena. 69 Fasciolaria, Lam., 19 Lemiox, 74 Filigrana, 13 Lenticuliua, Lam.. 19 Fiiola, 9,16 Lepas, 24 Firolinia, 16 Leptodea, 40, 74, 76, 84 Fissurella, Lam., 17,24 Leptoxis^, 26 ^i^tulana, Lam., 21 Lernea, L., 16 Flexiplis, 82 Lerneidia, 16 Fodia, Bosc, 21 Lignaria. 17 Furcells, Lam., 21 Liguus, Mont., 29 Fusiniis, 19 Lima, 20 Fusus, Lam., 19 Liniacidia, 16 Galathea, Brug., 20 Lingula, 21,24,86 Gasteiopodia, 14 Lingulaiia. 86 Gaterita, 17 Lithocarda, 20 Glaucus, Lam., 10. 16 Lituolites, Lam., 15 Glopsup, Poli., 20 Loligo, 11,15,95 Glycimeiis, Lam, 19 " tanceolata. 11 Gomphodelis, 16 " odagadium. 11 Gonamblus, 79 •' todarns. 11, 94 Goniclif, 24, 29, 87 Lomastoma, 26,27 dnbia, 29 '• teiebiina, 27 elliptira. 29 Loncosilla, 82, 84, 85 Gonotrema, 86,87 " solenoides. 8.J Giyphea, 24,27 Lophyrup, Poli , 17 Gryphitet^. 90 Loripen, Poli., 20 Gyrogonite.s, Lam., 15 Lucillite.s. 88 Haliotidla, 17 '• nigra, 88 Haliotis, Linn., 17 Lucina, Lam., 20 Halliraea, 9 Lulraria, Lam., 20 Harpa, Lam.. 19 Lymnea. 18, 20, 26 Harpana, 18 Lymnidia, 18 Helicina, 17,19 Lymnula, 24, 26, 27 Helix, Linn., 17, 24, 28, 67 Maorllia, 80 INDEX. Mactra, L., Magas, Sowb., MalleotuB, Malleus, Lam , Marginella, Lam., Megarites, Megorima, " crasta, " levis, " truncata, Melania, " costula, " rugosa, '' tessula, " viridifi, Melanidia, Melanippa, Melanites, Melanopsis, Lam., Melanosteum, Menomphis Meretrix, Lam., Mesodon, " maculatum. Mesomphix, Mesonotus, Mesypea, Metaptera, Migonitis, Miliolites, Lam., Mitra, Lam, Mitraxia Modiola, Lam. , Monoceras, Lam., Monodonta, Lam., Murex, Linn., Murexia, Mya, Linn., Myarina, Mytilidia, Mytilus, Linn., " exotilus, '■ recurviis, Nacella, Lam., Nassa, Lam., Nassaria, Natica, Lam., Nanticon Nantilia, Nautilus, Linn., Nerens, Ncrita, Neritacea, Neritina, Lam., Neritinia, Nicteis, Notelis, Notrema, " fissurella, " patelloides, Notremidia, Nucnla, Lam., Numieea, Nummulites, Lam., Nnmmulitia, Oblicites, Obliquaria, Oblongites, Obovaria, Obovites, Octomeia, Octopia, Octopas, Lam., " albus, " didynamus, " frayedus. 20 20,86 20 19 20 87 24,30 .30 SO 30 18, 66 9.S 67 93 67 IS 16 24 IS 21 68 20 67 67 24,27 17 17 44,74, 79, 81,85 20 15 19 19 20 19 18 19 IS 19 19 20 20, 24, 29 68 63 18 19 19 18 15 1.-) !:> 16 18 18 IS 18 12 21 24, 2.5, 30, 36, 62 24, 2.5 30 25 20 19 15 15 15 42,46,-58,7,5,82,84 13 54,76 86,87 17 14 11, 14, 95 11 11 11 Octopur heteropus, " maculatus, " moschatus. Lam., " niger, " tetradynamas, " vulgaris, Lam. , Ocythoe, " tubeTcnlata, Odatelia, " radiata, Odomphinm, Odorthns, Odotropis, Oebalus, Oiiva, Brug., Olivaiia, Omphalina. " CUpiP.'*, Omphemis, " lacustris, " phaioxis, Omphiscola, Onchidia, rmchidium, Lara., Opipteia, " bicolor. Orbicula, Cuv. Lam., Orbulites, Lam., Oithocera, Lam., Orthoceratite, Oscana, Brug., Ostrea, Linn., Ostreacia, Ovula, Brug., Oxi.sma, " bifida, Oxynoe, '• olivacea, Oxytrema, Ozoena, " aldrovamli, ' ' moschatus, Pachlloma, Pachosteon, Pachynus, Paludina, " fragilis, ■' vitula. Pandora, Lam., Pandoracia, Panorpa, Lam., Paphia, Lam., Parallus, Parma cella. Lam., Patella, Linn , Patellaria. Pecten, Brus;., Pectenia, Pectenut-, Pectunculus, Lam., Pediferia, Pedinus, Pedum, Lam., Peloris, Poll., Perforella, Peribea, Periodon, Peristera, Perna, Brug., Pernaria, Pernaridia, Peronea, Poll., Petricola, Lam., Pharaonis, Phasianella, Lam., Pbilomycns, 11 11 11 11 11 11 11,14,94,95 11,94 92 92 67 12 27 15 19 19 67 67 26 26 16 16 21,33 33 21, 24, 25, 87 16 1.5, 24 90 17 21, 24,85 21 19 21,30,68 30,68 17,33 33 26 11,14 11 II 86 24 IS 27.93 93 93 20 20 10 20 16 16 17,24 17 20, 21, 85 21 21 20 20, 36 20 20 21 18 16 17 19 20 20 20 20 19 18 18 64,65 INDEX. Philomycus flexnolarig. " fncsus, " oxyurus, " quadrilus, Pholadaria, Pholas, Linn., Phoronea, Phuscaria, PhyleriB, Phyllidia, Cuv., Phyllidinia, Phyllirhoe, Pf. ry, Phymesoda, Phymotis, Physa, Drap. , Physina, Pinna, Linn., Pinnnia, Placuna, Lam., Placnnia, Plagiola, 2n, 42, 46 Planorbia, Planorbis ,Qeof., " albescens, Planospira, Lam., PlanvUltes, Lam., Platalias, Platilia, Platilites, Platinites, ; " striata, " Plenreterite.s, •' aniwcla. " bifasciata. •' concentricd , " divisa, " l.Ueiistriaia, " latiundata, ■' obliqua, " steilata, " striata, Pleurinia, Plerobema, Pleurobranchus, Lam., Pleurocera, " acata, " angulata, " coneola, " fascial a, " gonula, " quadrosa, " retusa, " saxatilis, " turricula, " verrucosa, Pleuroma, Lam . Pleuropia, Pleuropteria, Pleuropns, Pleurotoma , Pleuroxis, Plicatnla, Lam., Pneumoderma, Cuv., Polarnaxia, Poleteria, Polithalus, Polizoon, Poliphonus, Polydectns, Polymesoda, Potamilae, " alatuB, " anratns, " ellipticas, '■ fasciatus, " fagciolaris, 66 65 64 64 19 19 17 21 IP in 16 9. 16 61 t7 18 18 20, 30, 68 20, :V) 21 21 64, 72. 7.5, 77 18 18. 24, 27 92 18 lo 18 86 J>6. 87 24, 28 28 90 91 91 91 91 91 91 91 9(1 91 S6 66 17 23, 25, 26, 66 66 23 23 13 67 67 23 22 23 6.5 18 16 16 16 24 24 21 9, 16 15 14 13 21 19 17 61 22, 24. 35 22 22 22 23 22 Potamilue fragilis, " gibbosus, " latissimus, " leptodnn. •' nervosn-'-, " niger, " nodosus, " obovalis, " obliquatns, ■' phaiedrus. " pusillus, " retusus, " snbrotundns, " triqueter, " truDcatus, " tubercularif, " verrucosus. " violacinus, " zonalis, Potamiphus, Praxidlce, Productus, Prognella, Proptera, Psephides, '■ par.idoxa, Psilotns, Poli , Pterocera, Lam , Pteropodia Pterotrachia, Forsli., Pupa, Lam. Puparia, Purpura. Bruj<., Pyramidella, Lam , Pyrula, Lam., Quadrula. Kadiolita, Lam., Ropalitia, Rotalites, Lam., Rostellaria, Lam , Rotuudaria, RupcUaria, Fleuijaii, Rupicola, Fhieriaii, Sachondrus, " saccata, Sachroa, Saconites, " granlaris, Salpa, Linn., Salparia, Sanguinolaria, Sarcopterus, ' ' ruber, Saxonus, Saxicava, Fl., Scalenaria. , Scyllea, Linn., Scytinoma, Scytinomia, Sephinia, Sepia, Linn., " mi'cronalai Seipula, Linn., Serpularia, Sigaretia, Sigaretus, Lam., Siliquaria, Lam., Sintoxia " lateralis, Siphalomphix, " bnnariensis Siphobranchia, Siphodon, Sipbonemns, Solarinm, Lam., Solen, Linn , 22 m 22 22 22 22 23 23 22 22 23 22 22 22 22 23 23 •22 22 s9 18 24,28, .30,87 90 20 44 89 88.89 20 19 9, 10, 15 9,16 17 17 19 IS 19 49 21 15 15 19 42, .50, 52, 76 19 19 21 21 •21 24. 31 ol 21 21 19 10,12. 16 12 IS 19 47, 52, 73. 76, 77 10,16 21 21 15 11. 16 11 13 13 17 17,33 IS 5^, 73. 7\ 76 53 93 93 19 12 13 18,24 19,84 6 INDEX. Solenaria, Spinifer, Sowb., Spirifer, Spirinea., SpiriUum, " Spiroglyphis, Daud., Spirographis. Viv., Spironites, Lam., Spironotia, Spirorbis, Daud., Spirilla, Lam., Spirvilaria, Spondylus, Lam., Stegomphix., Steniola, Stenodon, • Stenostoma, " convexa, Stenotoma, Stenoti'ema, " convexa. Stephastoma, Stephylla, " fusca, " luteecens, " pallida, Stomatella, Lam., Stomatia, Lam., Strigillaria., Strombia, Strombus, L., Strophesia, Strophitus. Strophomenes. " flexili.s, " levigata, Succinea, Drap., Snlcularia, Symphoma, Sympnonota bialata, Lea, Sympteru.s, Telistrophi.s, '• torsala, Tellina. Terebellum, Lam., Terebia, Brug., Terebraria, Terebratula, Lam., Terebratulite.s Eriensis, Terebrina, Teredaria, Teredo, Linn., Testacella, Lam., Te.-itacina, Tethydia, Tethys, L., Tetracea. Theoris, Thoena, Tigvias, Todarus, " argo, Torticella, Toxerites, " truncata, Toxolasma, Toxostoma, " globularis, Toxotrema. '• complanata, " globularis, Tremesia, " patelloides, Tremonia, Trem urus, Trichomecn.s, 19 Tridacna,|Bnig., 20 86 Trigella, 20 24 Trigonia, Brug., 20 13 Trigonima, 2S 13 " amygdaloideg, 28 13 " nucularis, 28 l.S Trigorlma, 24,86 15 Tiiodopsis, 24,27,68 14 " lunula, 68 13,18 Triton, L., 16 15 Tritonia, Lam., 16 15 Trochidia, 18 21 Trochinia, 17 93' Trochites, 66 17 Troehus, L., 18,24 24 Trophodon, 67 67 Trophodor, 24 67 Truncilla, 24 76, 77, 80 24 '' triqueter, 77 13,28 " truncata. 77 28 Trunculites, 87, 90 21 Turbinellus, Lam-, 18 12,16 Tiirbinacea, 18 12 Turbo, L., 18 12 Turbonus, 18 12 Turrilites, Lam., 15 17 Turritella, Lam., 18 17 Tylodina, 17,33 19 '• punctulata. 33 19 Ungulina, Daud., 20 19 Unio, 20, 29, 35, 36, 37, 46, 70 83, 85. 92 87 " abruptus. Say, 72 59 " alatUR Say, 36,45 69. 86, 87 " (Proptera) alata, 29 69 " (Lamp.silis) argyratuis. 84 69 " (Obliquaria) atroviolacca, 63 17 " " attenuata. 49 79,81,92 " aurata, 41,74 21 " badiu.s. 77 S5 " (Obliquaria) bioolor, 75 17 " (Epioblasma) biloba. 72 90 " (Obliquaria) bullata. 51 90 " " calendis. 75 20,24 " " pallida. 72 19 " (LampsiliB) cardium. 43 19 " cariosus. Say, 45 19, 86 " Caroliniana, Bcsc, 35, 40 21,24,30,86 " (Obliq. and Axim.) castaueus, 76 68,69,90 " chloris, 76 19 " (Toxolasma) cineresceps, 72 24 " (Obliquaria) Oliffordiana, 63 21 '• compres.sus, 77 17 " (Pleurobema) conica. 29 17 " (Obovaria) cordata. 55 16 " " var. ro.sea, 56 16 " corrugata, 86 17 " (Amblema) costata 58 17 " cras.sus, Say. 36,39,40 15 " crenulatus, 77 24 " (Elliptio) crahHa, 39 15, 94, 95, 96 " (Obovaria) crassa, 29 95, 96 " cultratus, 77 93 " (Pleurobema) cuneata. 56 24,28 " " var. maculata. 56 28 "* " " sulcata. 56 72 " (Obliquaria) cuprea. 48,75 24, 67 " (Toxolasma) cyclips, 72 67 var. fuscata. 72 28 " lutescenp. 72 28 " cylindrica, Say, 36,43 28 " (Obliquaria) cyphia. 49 62 " " decorticata. 46 62 " debiscens. Say, 92 12 " depressa. 77 18 ■ (Obliquaria) depressa, 47 17 '■ (Plagiola) depressa, 29 INDEX. nlo (MdtapteraLdlaphana, " (Elliptio) (jRatata, 74 Unio (Obliquaria) pusiila, 62 42 " quadrula, 61 " (Eurynia) " 29 " recta, 77 " (Obliquaria) " 75 " (Obliquaria) reflexa. 50 " (Lampsilis) diploderma, 73 " (Obliq. and Obov ) retusa. 29,51,77 " elegans, 77 " ridibundus. 70 " (Obligaaria) ellipsaiia. 48, 56 " (Eurynia) rimosa, 74 " var. fusca, 4S " (Obliquaria) rivularis, 76 " ellipta, 49 " (Lampsilis) rosea, * 44 " (Elliptio) elliptica, 42 " (Obliquaria) rubra, 57 " elliptica, 75,84 var. lineata, 57 " elliptio, 57 " pallida, 57 " (Elliptio) fasciata. 40,41 " " scalenia. 53 var. alternata, 40 " (Bar. and Eury.) solenoides, 29,43 " cuprea, 40 " (Obovaria) stegaria. 55 " nigrofasciata, 40 var. fasciolata, 55 " (Lampsilis) fasciola, 44,73 " tuberculata, .J5 " (Obliq. and Plagiola) fasciolaris 29.48 " " striata, 54 " " " fiava. 29,.S8,'49 : var. rosea. 55 " (Obliquaria) flexuosa. 50 j " tuberculata, 55 var. buUata. 51 ! " (Obov. aud Obliq.) subrotunda 29,52 " (Toxolasma) flexus, 73 1 var. maculatn, 52 " (Obliquaria) fontinalis, 76 " (Obovaria) syntoxis. 29 " (Elliptio) frafiilis, 41 " (Obliquaria) teneltns, 75 var. fuscata. 41 " (Elliptio) teres. 63 " (Lampsilis) fulgens, 84 " (Obovaria) torsa. 29, 54 " (Eurynia) falva. 74 var. margiuata, 54 '• (Amblema) gibbosa. 58 " (Amblema) torulosa. ."<7, 72 var. diffovmis, .)8 var. angulata, 57 " olivacea, 58 " (Obliquaria) triangular!.*. 53 " radiata, 58 " (Trancilia) triqueter. 29, 45 " (Truncilla) granulatu.s. 77 " " truncata. 29, 46 " (Obliquaria) interrupta. 47, 4S var. fusca, 4: ^>. ^^y /J /7^'" VJ.LKXXn 5 t^ /'Mt>t^.N # « 1 i •-^=J7- ■Kcv"^ 17' n ^0 ^-, <^-'%- /-' -4^iT/rirU'i