REPORT ON THE ASTEROIDEA. 179 
along the ray, but is considerably greater in the interbrachial arc, where the border 
formed by the infero-marginal plates occupies very nearly half the space between the 
mouth-angle and the margin; on the outer part of the ray the proportion of breadth to 
length diminishes gradually, but the breadth remains preponderant throughout. The 
surface of the plates is faintly but flatly convex, emphasized by the rounded bevel at the 
margin of the well-defined transverse channel between each successive plate. The surface 
of the plates is covered with uniform, well-spaced, hyaline, deciduous, hemispherical 
granules, similar to, but perhaps slightly smaller than, those on the supero-marginal 
plates, and the margins are furnished with a similarly webbed fringe of small spinelets 
directed horizontally over the transverse channels between the plates, the fringe increasing 
a little in breadth as it approaches the edge of the ray. On the infero-marginal plates 
which abut against adambulacral plates, the fringe is not present on that edge, but the 
four innermost infero-marginal plates, that is to say, two on each side of the median 
interradial line, which abut against the actinal intermediate (ventral) plates, have the 
fringe continuous round the inner end of the plates, and on a few plates next succeeding 
a trace of the fringe is discernible, the abortion being effected gradually. Each infero- 
marginal plate bears a single, small, compressed, comparatively broad, flat, truncate spine- 
let, scarcely longer than the length of the plate; it is articulated but adpressed to the 
ray, directed towards the extremity at a slight angle upwards, and it is placed at the 
extreme margin of the actinal surface, consequently a little below the upper edge of the 
infero-marginal plate, and stands close to its aboral margin. Occasionally on one or two 
plates in the interbrachial are a second smaller and very much narrower spinelet may be 
present at some distance from the marginal one, on the actinal surface, and likewise close 
to the aboral margin of the plate. 
The adambulacral plates are small, and, as seen with their armature when viewed 
from above, appear subquadrate or rhomboid in form. Their armature consists of a 
furrow series of five or six short, cylindrical, slightly tapering spinelets, the outer ones 
rather smaller than the others, and all radiating slightly apart at an angle over the 
furrow. The actinal surface of the plate is covered with membrane, and is devoid of 
spinelets, but bears round its margin, that is to say, on the three remaining sides, a series 
of small, uniform, skin-covered, papilliform, obtuse spinelets, very much shorter than the 
furrow series, and directed at an angle of about 45° to the plane of the plate, towards the 
adjacent plate, whether this be an adambulacral or marginal one. There is thus the appear- 
ance of a straight channel intervening between the series of adambulacral plates and the 
marginal plates over which the series of skin-covered spinelets is directed, and the adam- 
bulacral plates are themselves distinctly and clearly spaced. Near the middle of the 
aboral margin of each adambulacral plate is one comparatively very robust, short, stumpy, 
subconical spinelet, its posture suggesting resemblance to a thumb in relation to the 
furrow series of spinelets, if these were considered as the fingers of an outstretched hand. 
