SECT. XIV 



THE EURYPTERID^E 



245 



sensory. From our point of view, according to which 

 the larirc rowing limbs belong to the first trunk seer- 



o o o o 



mcnt, we should have had to conclude that one pair of 

 limbs had disappeared. Such a supposition is however 

 not necessary, as F. Schmidt has found and described 



p IG- 5 6. Eurypterus Fischer! Eichw. : Upper Silurian, natural size, after F.Schmidt 

 (from ZitteL's Handbnch der Palceontologie). Between the first pair of feet, 

 Schmidt found a fine pair of feelers, corresponding with the Antennules of the 

 other Crustacea. 



a pair of rudimentary antennae between the first pair, 

 so that Eurypterus possesses the typical number of 

 head appendages. It is a fact generally accepted that 

 the pair of large rowing limbs corresponds with that 

 of the sixth segment. There is, however, no general 

 agreement as to whether these first six segments form 



