. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College. Zoology; Zoology. ZONITES. 103 Con. Icon., Xo. 672 (1852) ? —Deshayks in Fi':u., I. 04, ?1. LXXXII. Fi^. 6. — W. G. BiNNEY, Terr. Moll., IV. 106.—Bland. Ann. N. Y. Lye, VII. 119 (excl. syn. inornata). UelLv hcaihraia, Binney, nee Say, Terr. Moll., II. 225, VI XXXII. Helix fidiginosa, Binney, in Bost. Journ. (pars, excl. descr., syn., ct fig.), 1840. Helix inornata, Keeve, 1. c. QQ(Sy not Say. Hyalina laevigata, Tkyon, Am. Journ. Conch., II. 247 (1866). Zoniks iKvigatns, W. G. Binney, L. & Sli., I. 287, Fig. 515 (186


. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College. Zoology; Zoology. ZONITES. 103 Con. Icon., Xo. 672 (1852) ? —Deshayks in Fi':u., I. 04, ?1. LXXXII. Fi^. 6. — W. G. BiNNEY, Terr. Moll., IV. 106.—Bland. Ann. N. Y. Lye, VII. 119 (excl. syn. inornata). UelLv hcaihraia, Binney, nee Say, Terr. Moll., II. 225, VI XXXII. Helix fidiginosa, Binney, in Bost. Journ. (pars, excl. descr., syn., ct fig.), 1840. Helix inornata, Keeve, 1. c. QQ(Sy not Say. Hyalina laevigata, Tkyon, Am. Journ. Conch., II. 247 (1866). Zoniks iKvigatns, W. G. Binney, L. & Sli., I. 287, Fig. 515 (1869). Zonitcs capnodeSf part, "VV. G. Binney, 1. c. Fig. 508. Animal: head and cyc-pcduncles dark blue; body and foot pearly white; margin of foot furrowed, furrows meeting over posterior termination. Caudal extremity bluish above, with a gland. A distinct locomotive disk. I have received specimens from Pennsylvania to Arkansas, from Illinois to St. Augustine, Florida, and Mobile. The spe- cies may therefore be said to inhabit the Interior and South- ern Region. It attains its greatest development in the Cum- Z. Usingatus, var. , , , ^ i • berland oubregion. A more globose variety is figm-ed. Fig. 24. A variety from Columbus, Georgia, and Franklin County, Tennessee, is more depressed. I formerly erro- neously referred this form to Z. capnodes. I have given the synonymy of this species in full to show under how many names it has appeared. It * ' " seems to have been sent to Ferussac by Rafinesque under the name it bears, though no description of it by the latter author is extant. Ferussac mentions it by name only in his "Tableaux" (1821), with no reference, however, to the figure which afterwards appeared (1832) in the " ; In 1840 Binney evidently refers to it in the " Boston Journal" as a striated variety of fuligi- 710SUS, and quotes Ferussac's figure. He also suggests its identity with lucuhratus. In 1848 the first descri


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