!246 



TEACTIYrTEr.rS. 



The hocly lenjjthened, verj* tliin, naked; eye lateral, cleft of Ihe mouth 

 small. Dui-sal fin long, with a partially separate and elevated portion 

 in front. No anal tin; ventral fins on the throat, wuii d(jvclu]jL'dj lail 

 out of the lengthened diiectioia of the body. 



DEALFISH. 



Vaagmdr, Loudon; Magazine of Natural History, vol. 



iv, p 215, the figure by Dr. Fleming, copied 

 by Mr. Yarrell, 1st. ed., vol. i, p. 191, but 

 rejected for another, 2nd. ed., vol. i, p. 210. 



Gymneirus ardicvs, Jexyns; Manual, p. 372. 



Tracli^ijpterns arcticus, Guxtiier; Cat. Br. M., vol. iii, p. 395. 



The Dealfish finds its home in the icy portion of the northern 

 ocean, and probably in its deepest recesses; from Avhich it emerges 

 only on rare occasions, when it visits or is thrown on the shores 

 of Iceland, Norway, and Finland; and our knowledge of it in 

 the first place is due to the inhabitants of the country first 

 named. But the substance of this fish, as of some others of this 

 family, is so tender and brittle, that examples have rarely been 

 secured in a perfect condition, for which reason a great degree 

 of obscurity remained for a long time on some of its characters; 

 and it is only within a few years that a definite description 

 and correct representation of its shape have been obtained; so 

 as to decide in what genus of the Ribband fishes it ought to 

 be placed. 



Its claim to be considered a British fish was first rendered 

 certain by Dr. Fleming, on the authority of a specimen which 

 was sent to him from the island of Sanday one of the Orkney 

 group; where it was caught alive, and where two or three ex- 

 amples had been seen within a short space of time. The specimen 

 examined was three feet in length, but by the time it had reached 

 Dr. Fleming, it had become so injured and broken that the 

 figure drawn from it bears little likeness to what we now know 



