THE WHALEBONE WHALES OK THE WESTEKN NORTH ATLANTIC. 193 



(1) A skeleton 16 ft. 5^ in. long from off Monomoy Pt. Lighthouse, Harwich- 

 port, Massachusetts, in the U. S. National Museum. (No. 20931, from the U. S. 

 Fish Commission, 1883.) 



(2) Measurements, description, and sketches of a female, 15 ft. 4 in., entangled 

 in the nets of the fishermen near Portland, Maine, in July, 1893, and exhibited in 

 that city. I owe the data relating to this specimen to Joseph P. Thompson, Esq., 

 Vice-President of the Poitland Society of Natui'al History. 



(3) Two photographs of a female, 22 ft. 8 in. long, captured near Quoddy 

 Head Life-saving Station, Maine, Sept. 6, 1889, and reported to the Smithsonian 

 Institution by Capt. A. H. Myers, keeper of the station. 



An imperfect skull was dredged up near Pigeon Cove, Mass., in 1881, and 

 sent to the National Museum, by Mr. Wm. H. Jackson. It is not now accessible. 

 (No. 23025.) 



The sketch of the exterioi- of the Portland specimen (text fig. 51) shows that 



Fig. 51. 



Fig. 52. 



BALJENOPTERA ACUTO-ROSTRATA LAC. PORTLAND, MAINE. 



Fig. 51.— Female, i.engih 15 ft. 4 in. Fig. 52.— Left Pectoral Fin of the Same. External Surface. 



(From Sketches by Joseph P. Thompson, Esq.) 



it corresponds with the diagnosis of B. acuto-rostrata as regards the general form, and 

 in the form of the dorsal and pectoral fins. The color markings on the external face 

 of the pectoral fin are exactly as in that species, as is shown by Mr. Thompson's 

 excellent figure (text fig. 52). His notes on this specimen are as follows: "The 

 color of the body was an ashy black above, passing into a pure white on the belly, 

 without any distinct demarkatioiis ; nor was there any apparent lateral line. The 

 blowhole was in a sunken cavity. The eye was very near the corner of the mouth. 

 The number of longitudinal furrows could not be accui'ately counted, though they 

 were very strongly'uiarked, of a pinkish color within the folds, and white without. 

 The baleen was°of a pinkish brown at the bases of the plates and fading in color 



