35S l I.I.ETIN 82, UNITED 8TATE8 NATIONAL MUSEUM 



included "East Endies," which is an error for "Indian Ocean," also given, the Mal- 

 dives and the Java Sea, from specimens in the British Museum, and Atjeh, Burma 

 (error tor Sumatra), based on the specimen in Leyden. The following localities listed 

 under Amphimetra milberti should have been given under this species — Panay, Zam- 

 boanga (based on the Challenger specimens), Padan ( = Padau) Bay, North Borneo, 

 and Ceylon. In an appendix two specimens are recorded from Y6, Burma, and notes 

 on them are given. The t \ pe specimen is said to have come from the "East Indies" 

 instead of from the "Indian Ocean." 



In a paper on (he crindids of the British Museum published in 1913 I recorded 

 under the name Amphimetra molleri one specimen from the Java Sea and another 

 labeled '/Brazil. Under the name Amphimetra milberti I recorded "one typical, but 

 rather small specimen" from Challenger station 212 and "one specimen" from Challen- 

 ge r station 203. At that time my concept of milberti was based upon two specimens 

 recently received from the Philippines, where they had been collected by the Albatross, 

 which seemed to agree with Carpenter's figure of milberti in the Challenger report. 

 These two specimens were subsequently found to be quite different from true milberti 

 and were named spectabilis. Amphimetra molleri is easily mistaken for a rather small 

 .1. spectabilis, so I have no hesitation in now referring the Challenger specimens to 

 in nil, ii, especially as molleri was subsequently collected by Dr. Th. Mortcnsen in prac- 

 tically the same locality. The Alert specimen in the British Museum that was listed 

 under Amphi antra milberti represents in reality A. tessellata. 



In 1915 Dr. Hubert Lyman Clark gave Amphimetra milberti as occurring in 

 Ceylon, basing his statement upon my identification of Chadwick's Ceylon specimens, 

 which was published in 1912. 



In my report on the crinoids of the Siboga expedition published in 19181 gave the 

 synonymy of this species and a complete list of the localities from which it is known. 

 These localities are all correct except that East Indies, originally an error for "Indian 

 Ocean," is again included. 



Dr. Torsten Gisl6n in 1936 recorded and gave notes on specimens from Maccles- 

 field Bank, Annam, Cochinchina, and Cambodia. 



In 1938 Miss Lee Boone recorded, under the name of Amphimetra ensifer, three 

 specimens that had been dredged by William K. Vanderbilt on his yacht Ara in the 

 Anambas Islands. Two of these, one large and one small, w r ere figured. From the 

 figures both appear to be quite typical examples of the species. 



In the same paper Miss Boone recorded and figured a typical specimen of Capil- 

 laster multiradiata (as Comanthus [Cenolia] samoana) from the Anambas Islands and 

 an example of Stephanometra protedus (as Lamprometra protectus) from Bali. 



AMPHIMETRA PINNIFORMIS (P. H. Carpenter) 



Antedon pinniformis P. H. Carpenter, Notes Leyden Mus., vol. 3, 1881, p. 180 (description; Andai, 

 New Guinea). — Bell, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1882, p. 533 (listed); p. 534 (specific formula). — 

 P. H. Carpenter, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1882 (1883), p. 746 (specific formula); Challenger 

 Reports, Zoology, vol. 26, pt. 60, 1888, pp. 54, 193, 224, 366, 378.— Hamann, Bronns Klassen 

 unrl OrdnunRcn des Tier-Reichs, vol. 2, Abt. 3, 1907, p. 1579 Qisted). — A. H. Clark, Notes 

 Leyden Mus., vol. 33, 1911, p. 176 (identity); Mem. Australian Mus., vol. 4, 1911, p. 713 

 (history), p. 714 (of Bell, 1884= Oligometrides adeonae), p. 716 (credited to Australia by P. H. 

 Carpenter, od the basis of Bell, 1884); Crinoids of the Indian Ocean, 1912, p. 31 (of Bell, 1884 = 



