[126a] Amphidotus cordatus.

[126b] Echinus miliaris, Plate VII.

[127] See Professor Sedgwick’s last edition of the “Discourses on the Studies of Cambridge.”

[129] Fissurella græca, Plate X. fig. 5.

[130a] Doris tuberculata and bilineata.

[130b] Eolis papi losa. A Doris and an Eolis, though not of these species, are figured in Plate X.

[136] Plate III.

[138] Certain Parisian zoologists have done me the honour to hint that this description was a play of fancy. I can only answer, that I saw it with my own eyes in my own aquarium. I am not, I hope, in the habit of drawing on my fancy in the presence of infinitely more marvellous Nature. Truth is quite strange enough to be interesting without lies.

[139a] Saxicava rugosa, Plate XI. fig. 2.

[139b] Plate VIII. represents the common Nassa, with the still more common Littorina littorea, their teeth-studded palates, and the free swimming young of the Nassa. (Vide Appendix.)