REPORT ON THE ASTEROIDEA. 141 
The ambulacral furrows are wide and open, occupying nearly the whole of the 
actinal surface of the ray. The adambulacral plates are small, and form regular 
triangular prominences, which indent, as it were, the margins of the furrow. Their 
armature consists of two short, subconical, sharply-pointed, or thorn-like spinelets, 
placed side by side on the aboral side of the projecting angle; they are consequently 
directed aborally and at an angle towards the furrow, diverging also slightly from 
one another. 
The mouth-plates are rather large, forming an acute angle adorally, with an 
elevated angular ridge along the line of suture, each plate being strongly bent 
downwards, and having the upturned edges compressed together to form the keel. 
The aboral extremity is more elevated than any other part, and presents a sharp 
angular peak, the mouth-plates sloping down therefrom with a graceful inward curve 
to the level of the actinal interradial area. Their armature consists of a single short 
conical mouth-spine, placed at the extremity of the adoral peak; and two others, 
about equal in size to the spinelets of the adambulacral armature, stand on the lateral 
margins of each plate, the most adoral of the two being situated nearly midway 
between the extremities of the margin. 
The actinal interradial areas, which are small and sagittiform in outline, do not 
extend beyond the third adambulacral plate. The intermediate plates are small and 
subregular, transversely elongate on the outer part of the area, and with a tendency 
to imbricate; this character, however, being so faintly presented that it is difficult 
to say whether imbrication really exists or not. 
Colour in alcohol, greyish white generally, but rather darker over the abactinal 
area of the disk. 
Locality.— Station 237, Off the coast of Japan, south of Kawatsu. June 17, 1875. 
Lat. 34° 37’ 0” N., long. 140° 32’ 0” E. Depth 1875 fathoms. Blue mud. Bottom 
temperature 35°°3 Fahr.; surface temperature 73°°0 Fahr. . 
Remarks.—Porcellanaster tuberosus is distinguished from the other species of 
Porcellanaster with only one cribriform organ in each interbrachial arc, by its broad 
and robust rays, with a large and tubercular terminal plate armed with three spines, 
and by having only two supero-marginal plates on each side of a ray armed with 
spines, which are stout. Other points of difference are noticed in the description. 
4. Porcellanaster crassus, Sladen (Pl. XXII. figs. 4-7; Pl. XXVII. figs. 1-4). 
Porcellanaster crassus, Sladen, 1883, Journ. Linn. Soc. Lond. (Zool.), vol. xvii. p. 225. 
Rays five. R=35 mm.; r=105 mm. R< 3°57. 
The rays are elongate, robust, and taper gradually from the base to the extremity. 
The disk is small, but not high, and is only slightly inflated above the level of the 
