Prof, F. M*Coy on some tiew Brachiopoda 



,19Jb»T3 •'S''i-^''^'pentamerm carbonarius (M'Coy).*'^-* ■to:*3a9l 



J^BSc. Globose, more or less inequilateral ; hinge-line nearly as 

 jjjwide as the shell, cardinal angles obtuse ; lateral and greater 

 - portion of front margin in one plane ; middle of front margin 

 abruptly raised into a very narrow, short, oblong or rounded 

 sinus; commissure blunt from the meeting of the valves at a 

 very obtuse angle. Entering valve varying from semicircular 

 to rhombic, very gibbous ; beak large, prominent ; profile re- 

 gularly arched from the apex to its front margin, its greatest 

 depth about the middle of the length ; mesial ridge narrow, 

 flattened, prominent, and strongly defined from the front 

 margin to the apex of the beak, either simple, divided by one 

 -'mesial hollow, or divided into four narrow ridges near the 

 ^^inargin, each side with about seven very large, rugged, angu- 

 lar, irregular, subequal ridges, at six lines from the beak, 

 beyond which they either continue simple to the margin, 

 or some or all of them dichotomize : surface rather rugged 

 _ and very coarsely granulo-punctate, or minutely pustular 

 ^ Jinder the lens, with strong thickened interruptions of growth 

 "at the margin after nine or ten lines long. Receiving valve 

 extremely gibbous ; beak very large, usually slightly inclined 

 to one side, varying greatly in its inroUment, according to the 

 form of the cardinal area, which is sometimes nearly half as 

 high as wide, triangular, very slightly concave, and nearly at 

 right angles with the plane of the lateral margins, in which 

 case the beak is prominent, and only slightly incurved, the 

 greatest depth of the valve being a little in front of its apex, 

 and the profile arching very gradually from thence to the 

 front margin ; in other specimens the beak is inrolled so as 

 nearly to touch that of the entering valve, when the cardinal 

 area is greatly reduced, very concave and lying nearly in the 

 lo |>lane of the lateral margins, the profile being more than semi- 

 rfoeircularly curved ; mesial hollow very strongly defined by two 

 xithick ridges from the apex to the narrow sinus in the front 

 *J^argin, either simply hollowed, or bearing four ridges, much 

 SOjgftialler than the lateral ones; lateral ridges about ten to 

 d^welve on each side at seven or eight lines from the beak, be- 

 &Sj?ond which they are either simple, or more frequently di- or 

 'Ztri-chotomous, as they approach the margin more rugged and 

 ^%regular in direction than those of the entering valve, varying 

 Ifitfrom three to six in three lines at 1 inch from the beak ac- 

 ^I%>rding to the amount of bifurcation. Internal mesial sep- 

 tum of receiving valve very lonf, reaching nearly to the 

 front margin, the lines of growth slightly arched towards 

 /^Jtlie beak; rostral divaricating portions scarcely two-thirds the 



