272 Transactions of the Society. 



Portugal which resemble the Malay forms in every respect. It 

 may be noted that in some of Terquem's figures of Uvigcrina 

 muralis from the Paris eocene,* there is an evident tendency to the 

 lobulation of the base of the chambers. 



S. nodosa is not uncommon in the Malay Archipelago and occurs 

 at several Stations in both Areas. 



Brady in his ' Challenger ' report writes " Sagrina nodosa is by 

 no means a common form : so far as the ' Challenger ' collections 

 are concerned, it only appears at one locality, — off the Cape of 

 Good Hope, depth 150 fathoms. Otherwise it has been reported 

 from the Mediterranean and from the Italian tertiaries." 



Sagrina striata Schwager sp. 



Dimorphina striata Schwager, 1866, Novara-Exped., Geol. 

 Theil, vol. ii. p. 251, pi. vii. fig. 99, and fig. 2 in text. Sagrina 

 striata Schwager, 1877, Boll. E. Com. Geol. Italia, p. 25, pi. fig. 35. 

 S. striata (Schwager) Brady, 1884, Chall. Kept., p. 524, pi. lxxv. 

 figs. 25, 26. Sipliogcncrina {Sagrina) striata (Brady) Egger, 1893, 

 Abhandl. k. bayer. Akad. Wiss., CI. II. vol. xviii. p. 316, pi. ix. figs. 

 32, 34, 35, 64, 65. 



Usually this is not a common form, but in the Malay Archi- 

 pelago it is well represented, being found in considerable numbers 

 at several Stations in both Areas. The examples are fine and exhibit 

 greater affinity with S. raphanus than with S. nodosa. 



Brady specifies the following localities : — " Off the coast of South 

 America, south of Pernambuco, 350 fathoms ; shore-sand, east coast 

 of Madagascar; off Kandavu, Fiji Islands, 210 fathoms; off New 

 Hebrides, 125 fathoms; Torres Strait, 3 to 11 fathoms; off Ki 

 Islands, 129 fathoms ; and oft 1 the Philippines, 95 fathoms." The 

 ' Gazelle ' Stations are Mauritius, 225 fathoms, and West Australia, 

 196 fathoms. 



Sagrina raphanus Parker and Jones. 



Uvigcrina (Sagrina) raphanus Parker and Jones, 1865, Phil. 

 Trans., vol. civ. p. 363, pi. xviii. figs. 16, 17. Sipliogcncrina costata 

 Schlumberger, 1883, Feuille Jeunes Nat., p. 118, fig. b. Sagrina 

 rapha?ius (P. and J.) Brady, 1884, Chall. Ptept., p. 585, pi. lxxv. 

 figs. 21-25. Sipthogcncrina (Sagrina) raphanus (P. and J.) Egger, 

 1893, Abhandl. k. bayer. Akad. Wiss., CI. II. vol. xviii. p. 317, 

 pi. ix. fig. 36. 



Although not quite so abundant in the Malay Archipelago as 

 S. striata, nor so widely distributed, the examples are fine and 

 characteristic, and both the microspheric and megalospheric forms 

 are represented. 



* Mem. Soc. Geol. Fr., se'r. 3, vol. ii. 1882, p. 119, pi. xx. figs. 26-29. 



