REPORT OF COMMISSIONER OF FISH AND FISHERIES. [ 32 ] 
mg, so as to restore the posterior eiul and some of the middle portions, 
giving some idea as to what its original structure must have been. The 
texture and structure of this part of the pen was somewhat like that of 
Loligo , but it was thinner, and had less definite outlines, and less of the 
peculiar quill-shape seen in the latter. The anterior end of the blade, 
instead of being even and regular in outline, appears to have been broadly 
rounded, or somewhat abrupt, with an indefinite outline, thinning out 
gradually on all sides into a soft, fibrous membrane, while the shaft, or 
or quill-portion, was not so distinctly differentiated from the broad, thin 
blade, which tapered to the posterior end, and was probably slightly 
hooded at the tip. The fragments in my possession belong to four more 
or less separated sections. The first section includes 11 inches of the 
posterior end, from close to the extreme tip forward; the second section 
includes about 9 inches, belonging to the posterior portion, and extends 
to about 25 inches from the posterior end, but lacks the extreme lateral 
margins outside the costm (Plate III, fig. 3); the third section consists 
of about 7.5 inches, belonging to the middle region, but does not include 
the whole width on either side of the midrib; the fourth section is about 
10 inches in length, and probably came from near the anterior end of the 
blade, apparently representing nearly the whole width on both sides. 
Prom these fragments we can restore pretty accurately the last 25 inches 
and 12 inches or more of the middle portion, though the precise form of 
the indefinite anterior end of the blade must remain doubtful. The ex¬ 
treme posterior tip is broken off, but it was evidently pointed and thin 
as in Ommastreplies. At the mutilated end the breadth is now about a 
third of an inch. From this point the lateral edges diverge rapidly, with 
a slightly concave outline, for about 1.25 inches, where the breadth be¬ 
comes 1.20 inches; beyond this the margins are nearly straight, and di¬ 
verge gradually to the end of the first section, at 11 inches from the tip. 
At this place the breadth is 3.10 inches, the marginal portions outside of 
the lateral costm being about .40 of an inch and the midrib about .25 of 
an inch broad. Beyond this point a section about 4.75 inches long is 
entirely wanting, and the succeeding section lacks the marginal por¬ 
tions, the lateral costa) forming the margins on both sides. At 19.50 
inches from the tip the breadth between the lateral cost® is 3.75 inches; 
at 25 inches it is 5 inches broad. Whether the marginal portions origi¬ 
nally extended to this point with a breadth as great as they have at 11 
inches is uncertain, for their breadth decreases somewhat to that point, 
from a point about 4 inches from the tip, where their breadth is .GO of 
an inch. The midrib is strongly marked, being raised into a semi-cylin- 
dricalform, and of somewhat thicker material than the lateral portions; 
its breadth and liight steadily increases throughout both these sections 
and the following one, until it becomes nearly half an inch broad, but 
in the section from nearer the middle it is low and narrow, and de¬ 
creases rapidly toward the end. The lateral costa) are well marked, 
considerably elevated, and well rounded; they run at first close to and 
