tran>\>Tsal suture dorsally. Caudal rami long and narrow, discontiguous, each 

 with a small in tin- middlr of the outer edg'-. the L } middle apical seta; of a 



p'-cidiar -oft con-M.'iicy. Anterior antenna' consisting "1 7 \vell-detined articu- 

 lations, none uf \vliieli are particularly expanded; those of male imperfectly prehen- 

 >ile i?i. posterior antenna' with the inner ramus verj strong, outer comparatively 

 small. -1-artieiilate. Mandibles \\itli the masticatory part very massive, palp com- 

 paratively large, with hoth raiui somewhat lamellar, and carrying thick plumose 

 Maxilla- without anv trace of eitl .podite or vibratory plate. Anterior 



maxillipeds with the 1st hasal joint gihhously expanded hehind: posterior ones 

 1-articulate. last ~2 joints (constituting the terminal parti comparatively small and 

 armed with ^uniform seta'. 1st pair of nataton lr-s \\ith hoth rami .'J-articulate 

 and of iioi-mal appearance, the :> succeeding pairs with the inner ramus more or 

 l.'-s transformed. Last pair of le^s veiy small, with im inner expansion of the 

 proximal joint. 



/'///"//,>.- This -cnus was established by ( 1 an>n A. M. Norman, to in- 

 clude a peculiar deep-water Copepod found by him off the English coast. The 

 miens were sent to Prof. Urady for examination, and in the well-known 

 .Monograph of the latter author, the genus is recorded as a member of the family 

 Mi,l,lii-inl<i'. This arrangement is unquestionably incorrect, as the genus does 

 not exhibit any very close all'inity to Mi*n/ihri<i : and Dr. (liesbrecht has also subse- 

 quently called attention to the unreasonableness of Brady's classification as re^anU 

 this genus. \\Y do not know at present with certainty more than a single species 

 belonging to this genus. 



9. Cervinia Bradyi, Norman, 

 in. \i). 



inntfl lliiiilin N.>I-III:III. in l!r;idy'< .Monc-r.-ipli c.i'ili.- liriii^li < ' .|p'-|..>-l:i, Vol. I. p. Mi. I'l.XXIN' A. 



flgS. 3-13. 



>'y ,//)> Characters. 1'^nmlc. Rody slender and elongated, with the an- 

 terior division >omewhat depi.--<.-d and gradually widenin.u in front. ( 'ephalovoinr 

 comparatively short and broad, almost truncated in front, with the rostral plate 

 very small, triangular. La-t segmenl of inetasome much narrower than the pre- 

 ceding segment. I'rox.me (comprising the caudal rami) fully as long as the 

 anterior division of the body, genital ^egim-nt very Large, ''quailing in length the 

 .'{ remaining segments combined, and sli-htlv dilated in its anterior part, but 

 without any lateral projections; the succeeding segments finely hairy on the ventral 

 and lateral faces, last segment longer than tie' preceding one and tapering dis- 



