SHUMARD — CATALOGUE OF PALAEOZOIC FOSSILS. 359 



CIIEIROCRINUS, Hall (continued). 

 (Calceocrinus?) stigrnatus, Hall, 18G3. Trans. Alb. Inst., vol. iv., 



p. 31 of Abstract. — Niag. — Waldron, Indiana. 

 (Calceocrinus?) tunicatus, Hall, 1859. 13th Rep. Reg. State Cab. 



New York, p. 124.— Arch. 

 (CalceocrinusV) ventricosus, Hall, 1859. 13th Rep. Reg. State 



Cab. N. York, p. 123. 



CLEIOCRINUS, Billings, 1857. Rep. Geol. Surv. Canada, p. 276. 

 grandis, Billings, 1859. Can. Org. Rem., Dec. iv., p. 54, pi. 5, fig. 



3.— TV.— Ottawa, Canada. 

 magnificu8, Billings, 1859. — Can. Org. Rem., Dec. iv., p. 54, pi. 



5, fig. 3.— TV.— Ottawa, Canada, 

 regius, Billings, 1857. Rep. Geol. Surv. Canada, p. 276. — 1859. 



Can. Org. Rem., Dec. iv., p. 52, pi. 5, fig. 1.— TV.— Ottawa, 



Canada. 



CLOSTEROCRINUS, Hall, 1852. Pal. N. York, vol. ii., p. 179. 

 elongatus, Hall, 1852. Pal. N. York, vol. ii., p. 179, pi. 41 A, fig. 

 2. — CI. — Lockport, New York. 



COCCOCRINUS, J. Muller, 1855. Yerhand. Naturhist. Yereins 

 Rhein. und Westph., Jahrg. 12, p. 20, pi. 7. 

 bacca, Rcemer, 1860. Sil. Faun. West Tenn., p. 51, pi. 4, fig. 5. 

 — Niag. — Perry Co., Tennessee. 



CODASTER, McCoy, 

 alternatus, Lyon, 1857. Geol. Ky., vol. iii., p. 493, pi. 3, fig. 3. 



(Comp. C. Americanus.) — U. H. — Falls of Ohio. 

 Americanus, Shumard, 1858. Tr. Ac. Sci. St. Louis, vol. i., p. 



239.— U. H.— Falls of Ohio. 

 Kentuckyensis — Pentremites Kentuckyensis, Shumard, 1858. Tr. 



Acad. Sci. St. Louis, vol. i., p. 239, pi. 9, fig. 5. — Arch. — 



Button-mould Knob, 7 miles south of Louisville, Ky. 

 pyramidatus, Shumard, 1858. Tr. Acad. Sci. St. Louis, vol, i., 



p. 238, pi. 9, fig. l.— U. H.— Falls of Ohio. 



steiliformis — Pentremites stelliformis, Owen and Shumard, 1850. 

 Jour. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phil., n. ser., vol. ii., p. 67, pi. 7, fig. 

 16. — Enc — Hannibal, Missouri; Burlington, Iowa; near 

 Monmouth, Illinois. 



Whitei, Hall, 1861. Des. New Crinoidea, Prelim. Not., p. 10— 

 1861. Bost. Jour, Nat. Hist., vol. vii., p. 327. — Enc. — Bur- 

 lington, Iowa. 



CODONOCRESUS, v. Pterotocrimjs. 



sal plates are also anchylosed. The first dorsal plate is short triangular, 

 and supports upon its ohlique upper edges two large irregular five-sided 

 lateral pieces, and upon the upper beveled edges of these rests a short tri- 

 angular tumid plate. 



Geol. Pos. c£- Locality. — In blue calcareous shale, supposed to he of the 

 age of the Keokuk division of the Archimedes Limestone. Button-mould 

 Knob, seven miles south of Louisville, Kentucky. At this locality we have 

 found hundreds of basal and dorsal plates of this species in the space of a 

 few yards, but never any examples with arms and column attached. 



