336 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1897. 



ANOMALINA POLYMORPHA Costa. 

 (Plate 79, fig. 3.) 



Strongly resembles A. coronata, but is characterized by the presence 

 of one or several short, stout spinous outgrowths, usually from the 

 periphery of the shell. If but one spine is present, that is generally a 

 prolongation of the final segment. 



Locality. — Collected at the same station as A. coronata. 



Genus RUPERTIA. 



Test columnar, growing attached by a slightly-spreading base; seg- 

 ments numerous, spirally arranged; aperture at the inner margin of 

 the final segment. 



RUPERTIA STABILIS Wallich. 

 (Plate 79, fig. 4.) 



Irregularly flask-shaped, having a moderately-inflated body, a short, 

 thick neck, and an expanded lip. The lip is formed by the spreading 

 base by which the shell adheres to some other body. The neck is 

 formed by about two superimposed convolutions; the body by the 

 inflated segments of the succeeding convolutions; walls thick and 

 coarsely perforated; aperture at the inner edge of the final segment. 

 Length, 1.5 mm. (^ inch), more or less. 



Localities. — North Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico (stations 2530, 2383), 

 956 and 1,181 fathoms. 



Subfamily TINOPORIN^;. 



Test consisting of irregularly-heaped chambers, with a more or less 

 distinctly spiral primordial portion. 



Genus GYPSINA. 



Test free or attached, spheroidal or spreading; structure acervuline, 

 radiating, or laminated; chambers rounded or polyhedral, coarsely 

 perforated. 



GYPSINA INH^RENS Schultze. 

 (Plate 79, fig. 6.) 



Adherent; contour discoidal, more or less distorted according to the 

 form of the surface to which it was adherent; composed of numerous 

 subglobular segments irregularly heaped together, except at the very 

 beginning, where a brief spiral arrangement is perceptible on the under 

 side; walls coarsely perforated ; no general aperture. Diameter, about 

 1.25 mm. (-§7; inch). 



Localities. — Off Florida Keys, Straits of Yucatan, and Exuma Sound 

 (stations 2641, 2358, 2629), 60 to 1,169 fathoms. 



