APPENDIX. .50n 



Eaia trachura, Gilbert (Proc. U. S. Xat. Mus., 1891, p. 53!»), wii« taken in tlic Suuta 

 Barbara Channel in S22 fatbf)ins. 



Bai(i, ((byxsicola, Gilbert and Tboburn (Uull. U. S. Fish Ooni., 18'J4), Mas taken ull Queen 

 Charlotte Islands, British Colnmbia, at a depth of 1,588 fathoms. 



Page 28: Bnia Jn/prrhorcn. The Norwegian North Sea Expedition of 1878 look a s|)ee,i- 

 men 15 miles northwest of Spitzbergen in 459 fathoms (Collett, Christ. Vid. Selsk., iv, 

 1878, 8). 



Page 29: R<iht fiillnnUa. Collett reports this species from numerous localities between 

 Ja^dereu's Ifev and Troiidhjem's I'iord, at a depth of SO to J 50 fathoms. Its nortliern limit 

 is K lat. 630 45' (Christ. Vid. Selsk. Forh., 1882, No. 29, 4). 



Page 30: Bala niflrosiensis. Collett re]>orts that since the discovery of this species at 

 Troiidhjem's Fiord, in ISSO-'Sl, it lias been fre(]uently observed in the same locality at 

 depths of 100 to 300 fathoms. Its northern limit is N. lat. 63° 45' (Christ. Vid. Selsk. Forh., 

 1882, No. 29, 4). 



Page 30 : Raia hafis. Collett reports that this species is common along the entire coast 

 of Norway and the fiords of Fiiimark, and that it descends to a depth of 200 fathoms. Its 

 northern limit is N. lat. 71° (Christ. Vid. Selsk. Forh., 1882, No. 29, 4). 



Page 30: Raia vomer. Collett reports that many examples were taken at Ja'deren's 

 Eev, Bergen and Trondhjem Fiord, and that it is rare elsewhere in Norwegian waters. It 

 is found in depths of 100 to 150 fathoms, and deeper. Its northern limit is N. lat. 03^45' 

 (Christ. Vid. Selsk. Forh., 1882, No. 29, 4). 



Family TRYGONID.^. 

 UROLOPHUS, M. & II. 



UrolnpliHfi l-aianiis, Giinther (Challenger Report, vi, 37; xxii, 12), was from Challenger 

 station 192, oft' the Ki Islands, in 140 fathoms. 



Urolophus Goodei, Jordan and Bollman (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 1889, p. 151), taken in 

 IVIagdalen Bay at a. depth of 33 fathoms, is probably hemibathybial. 



Page 31 : Chimara monslrosa. Add to synonymy: 



Vailhiut, Exp. Sci. Trav. et Tal., 80, PI. iv, fig. 2. 



Chimara mediterraneus, Kisso, Hist. Nat. Eur. Merit!., iii, 1826, p. 08. 



Specimens of this species were also taken by the TravaiUeur at station lxxxvi, oft' the 

 coast of Soudan, in 800 meters; station XCV, on the Banc d'Arguin, in 1,230 meters; and 

 station cxxvii, oft' the Azores, in 1,257 meters. 



Viuciguerra obtained a specimen, July 2G, 1879, in the Gulf of Genoa, at a depth of 

 GOO meters (Crociere delle Violante, 1883, 23). 



Capello has obtained several specimens in the markets of Lisbon (Peixes de Portugal, 

 1880, 43). 



The Rev. Mr. Green obtained an egg capsule off the southwest coast of Ireland at a 

 depth of 315 fathoms (Giinther, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., Dec, 1889, 415). 



The discovery of this capsule coiiflriiisDr. Giinther in his opinion that those previously 

 figured did not belong to CMmcera, but to Callorhynchus. It is to be hoped that Dr. Vail- 

 lant will publish a statement of the character of the fragments found by him in the Gulf 

 of Gascoiiy and their likeness to the one so well figured by Dr. Giinther. 



GMmwra affinis. A single specimen has been taken by the fishermen of Setubal, 

 Portugal (Peixes de Portugal, 1880, 43). 



Page 30: Ahpocephalus /x'cofor, Alcock. A good figure is given in "Illu.stratioiis of 

 the Zoology of H. M. S. Investigator;' Part i, PI. IV, fig. 2, Calcutta, 1892. 



Alepocephahis BIa)ifonlii,A\coek (Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., November, 1892, 357), is a 

 species described from a single male specimen, about 14 inches long, obtained by the 

 Investigator at station 128, in the Gulf of Manaar, at a depth of 902 fathoms. 



