Recent and Fossil Foraminifera. 311 



from a clay. Brady's specimens are all from tropical or sub- 

 tropical localities, and so far as we are aware the species has not 

 previously been recorded in the fossil state. 



9. Spiroloculina grata Terquem. 



Spiroloculina grata Terquem, 1878, Mem. Soc. Geol. France, ser. 3, vol. i. 



p. 55, pi. x. figs. lia-15b. 

 Ditto. (Terquem) Brady, 1881, Foram. ' Challenger,' p. 155, pi. x. figs. 16, 



17, 22, 23. 

 Spiroloculina nitida (d'Orbigny), (striate variety) Millett, 1898, Malay Forams. 



Journ. R. Micr. Soc. p. 266. 



The specimens observed are all fossil. Terquem's specimens 

 were Tertiary fossils from Ehodes. Its recent habitat is the 

 shallow water of tropical seas. 



Eecorded by Millett, "very rare." 



10. Spiroloculina foveolata Egger. Plate XV. fig. 2. 



Spiroloculina foveolata Egger, 1893, Abhandl. d. k. bayer. Akad. d. Wiss., 



CI. II. vol. xviii. p. 221, pi. i. figs. 33, 31. 

 spiroloculina nitida (reticulate variety) (Egger) Millett, 1898, Journ. R. Micr. 



Soc, p. 266. 



One very well preserved fossil. Egger's specimen was from 

 Mauritius and Millett's from the Malay Archipelago. It has 

 apparently never been recorded as a fossil. 



11. Spiroloculina pertusa Terquem. (PI. XV. fig. 1). 



Spiroloculina pertusa Terquem, 1882, Mem. Soc. Geol. France, ser. 3, vol. ii. 

 Mem. III. p. 160, pi. xvi. fig. 27 a, b. 



Fossil. A single specimen only of this pretty form, which 

 agrees in every respect witli Terquem's figure. 



Miliolina Williamson. 



12. Miliolina seminal am Linne sp. 



Serpula seminulum Linne, 1767, Svst. Nat. 12th ed. p. 1264, No. 791. 



Ditto. 1788, 13th (Gmelin's) ed. p. 3739, No. 2. 



Miliolina seminal urn (Linne) Brady, 1884, Foram. 'Challenger,' p. 157, pi. v. 



fig. 6 a, b, c. 

 Ditto. (Linne) Brady, 1887, Synopsis British Recent Foraminifera. 

 Ditto. (Linne) Goes, 1894, Arctic and Scandinavian Forams., p. 108, pi. 



xviii. figs. 838-838 n, and pi. xix. figs. 840-3. 



Fossil and recent. This usually abundant species is poorly 

 represented in these sands in either the fossil or the recent state. 

 Goes {supra) furnishes an extensive series of figures of this species 

 and its allies. 



Eecorded by Millett, " very common." 



