PROCEEDINGS OF UNITED STxVTES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 399 



■uliole. surface of the sbell. The shell itself is rather large, swollen, 

 subovate, well-rounded venti-ally, but obliquely subtruncate anteriorly. 

 Eostrum rather short, narrow, well defined, tapered ; on the rostrum 

 there are eight or nine rather broad, low, radiating costee. The body of 

 the shell is covered with regular, raised and strong, radiating costai, 

 over lifty in number, separated by deep grooves of about the same 

 width as the costal ; anteriorly these ribs become small ; posteriorly, 

 near the base of the rostrum, live or six become much larger than the 

 rest, and have smaller ones alternating with them. 



Color yellowish white ; in life rosy, from the internal organs showing 

 through. Length, 19™'"; beak to ventral edge, 12"™. 



South of Martha's Yineyard, 115 fathoms ; about 90 to 100 miles 

 south of Newport, 85 to 120 fathoms, stations 871, 873, 871, 87G, «S:c. 

 Several living specimens of various sizes. 



Cardium, sp. 



A roundish species of Cardium, about IS*""" in diameter, is represented 

 by a single valve, in good condition. The surfa(;e is rather closely and 

 regularly cancellated. The ribs are smooth, without scales or spines. 

 It was taken at station 865. 



Astarte crenata Gray. 



Parry's Voyage, app. — Friele, Cafcal. Norv. Nordmeer-Exp. Spitzb., Moll., p. 



267, 1879. 

 ? Astarte crehricostata Forbes; Jeffreys; G. O. Sars; and other Euroj)eaa 



■writers. 

 Astarte crehricostata Gonkl, Invert., Mass., 2(1 ed., p. 128, fig. 440 (var. lens). 

 Astarte lens (Stimp., MSS.) Verrill, Amer. .Journ. Sci., iii, p. 287, 1872. 



Large numbers of specimens, which seem to agree closely with the 

 typical arctic and deep-water form of this species, were taken at nearly 

 all the stations, in 05 to 500 fathoms. It was most abundant at stations 

 880, 891, 895. 



These form series that appear to graduate into the large, broad, flat- 

 tened form to which the name lens has been applied, which is abundant 

 in the Bay of Fundy and Gulf of Maine, in 50 to 150 fathoms. 



The typical form is smaller, more swollen, with the edges more 

 rounded, and less expanded posteriorly. All the forms have the edges 

 regularly crenulated. 



Cryptodon Sarsii (Phil. ). 



Axinus Sarsii G. O. Sars, op. cit., p. 60, pi. 19, figs. .'S a, h. 



A single dead specimen of a shell agreeing very closely with this 

 form, as figured by G. O. Sars, was dredged by our party, in 1870, off 

 Cape Cod. 



Crypton obesus Verrill. 



Auier. .Tourn. Sci., iii, p. 287, pi. 7, fig. 2, 1872. 



I may take this occasion to remark that Sars's figure (pi. 19, fig. 7) of 

 C. obesus Verrill does not represent the large form described by me 

 under that name, which is remarkable not only for its swollen form, but 



