MILIOLININAE 3i7 



The specimens are large and well developed, especially at WS 71 and 93. They are 

 rather broader and shorter than the d'Orbignyan figure suggests, but the Type specimen 

 is not to be found in Paris for comparison. 



22. Miliolina inca (d'Orbigny) (Plate VI, figs. 13-15). 

 Qtdnquelociilina inca, d'Orbigny, 1839, FAM, p. 75, pi. iv, figs. 20-2. 



Three stations: WS 87, 88, 93. 

 A single specimen at each station, agreeing with d'Orbigny's figure. The striae rather 

 faint in the specimens from WS 87, 88, which are young, but are much coarser in the 

 adult specimen from WS 93. The Type is not to be found in Paris. 



23. Miliolina boueana, d'Orbigny. 



Ouinqiieloculina boueana, d'Orbigny, 1846, FFV, p. 293, pi. xix, figs. 7-9. 

 Miliolina boueana, Brady, 1884, FC, p. 173, pi. vii, figs. 13 a, b. 

 Miliolina boueana, Costa, 1853, etc., PRN, 1856, p. 329, pi. xxv, fig. 15. 



Four stations: 48; WS 84, 93, 245. 



Rare. The specimens are poorly developed, the best are at 48. This Type also is missing. 



24. Miliolina costata (d'Orbigny). 



Ouinqueloculina cosiata, d'Orbigny, 1826, TMC, p. 301, no. 3. 



Qiiinqiieloculina costata, Schlumberger, 1893, MGM, p. 69 (in the reprints, p. 211), text-fig. 20, 



pi. iii, figs. 75-6. 



Miliolina costata, Heron-Allen and Farland, 1914, etc., FKA, 1915, p. 579, pi. xliv, figs. 9-1 1. 



One station: WS 88. 



Several very good specimens, agreeing with the one remaining and recognizable Type 



in Paris. 



25. Miliolina pygmaea (Reuss), 



Ouinqueloculina pygmaca, Reuss, 1849-50, FOT, p. 384, pi. v (i), fig. 3. 



Ouinqueloculina lucida, Karrer, 1868, MFKB, p. 147, pi. ii, fig. 7. 



Miliolina pygmaea, Heron-Allen and Earland, 1916, FWS, p. 211, pi. xxxix, figs. 10-16 (only). 



Fourteen stations: WS 80, 83, 88, 89, 90, 91, 93, 99, 108, 210, 215, 217, 225, 408. 



The specimens are usually few in number, but at WS 83 they are extraordinarily 

 abundant. All the specimens agree, on the whole, better with the description and figure 

 of Oiiiuquelociilina hicida, Karrer, lit supra, in which the chambers are slightly more 

 inflated and the sutural depressions deeper than in Reuss's species. They are, moreover, 

 rough in surface texture. Karrer draws attention to this, while Reuss ignores the point. 



26. Miliolina venusta (Karrer). 



Quinqueloculina venusta, Karrer, 1868, MFKB^ p. 147, pi. ii, fig. 6. 

 Miliolina venusta, Brady, 1884, FC, p. 162, pi. v, figs. 5, 7. 

 Miliolina venusta, Flint, 1899, RFA, p. 298, pi. xliv, fig. 2. 



Two stations : 53 ; WS 92. 



Single specimens only at these stations. 



4-2 



