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OF NEW SOUTH WALES. 55 Notwithstanding, however, this apparently convincing evidence, I ana indisposed to believe it possible that an animal so completely shut up in a thick coriaceous unmuscular sac, can have any power of external movement, nor is it likely that such a power would be possessed by an animal whose whole life (except in infancy) has to be passed firmly rooted to the bottom of the sea. I hope that some one having the leisure and opportunity, will endeavour to solve this problem. On some Australian Littorinid^. By the Rev. J. E. Tenison-Woods, F.L.S., F.G.S., Corr. Memb. Linn. Soc. N.S.W., &c. We have in Australia and Tasmania certain coast shells which are variously distributed in several genera by different authors. They all resemble each other in this, that they are found for the most part on rocks which are seldom covered by the tide. They are not nacreous. They have a horny operculum, with a marginal nucleus and few whorls, and the animal has a small round foot which has never tentacular filaments like the Turbo, Trochus, or Phasianella. They are generally widely distributed, subject to very much variation, according to the locality where they are found. This has led to the same shell being regarded in different places as a different species, and the varieties also have been regarded as different species. In order better to understand the present state of our knowledge of these marine mollusca, it may be as well to state the history of the genus, or rather its classification. To Linneeus all these shells were Turbos' and those which were known to Schrotter, Chemnitz, Gmelin, Favanne, Born, Humphrey, and Lamarck, came under the same generic appellation. In 1821 M. Baron Ferussac, in his large and expensive work on the fresh water shells of France (so large and so expensive that it was never finished), divided the genus Paludina into five sub-genera. He gave the fifth the name of Littorma (written also with one t, or two r's by various writers), and included in that the common perry-winkle Turbo UUoreus of

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On some Australian Littorinidae

J E Tenison-Woods
Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 3: 55-72 (1878)

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