230 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. 
The madreporiform body is small, and but little more than its own diameter distant from 
the inner edge of the marginal plates. It is slightly below the level of the general paxillar 
area; and its surface is grooved by rather coarse but deep striation furrows. 
Colour in alcohol, a bleached yellowish white, with a deeper shade, verging on light 
brown, on the paxillar area. ' 
Locality.—Off the Cape Verde Islands. (Depth and conditions not recorded.) 
Remarks.—This species is unquestionably allied to Psilaster andromeda and Psilaster 
acuminatus, but is at once distinguished by the much greater breadth of the supero- 
marginal plates ; by the comparative smallness and regularity of the abactinal paxille ; by 
the single spine on the infero-marginal plates ; and by the character of the granulation of 
the marginal plates generally. 
4, Psilaster gracilis, n. sp. (Pl. XLI. figs. 5 and 6; Pl. XLII. figs. 9-11). 
Rays five R=65mm.,r=12 mm. R<55r. Breadth of the ray at the third 
supero-marginal plate, 11°5 mm. 
Rays elongate, narrow and tapering throughout to a finely pointed extremity, having 
a subcylindrical facies, slightly compressed. Abactinal area slightly convex and capable 
of inflation. Actinal area subplane. Lateral walls comparatively high and vertical. 
Interbrachial arcs open and widely rounded. 
The abactinal paxillar area of the disk and rays is covered with comparatively large 
and closely placed paxille. These are composed of very short, stumpy, papilliform spine- 
lets. Three to five are central, more robust than the rest, often almost granuliform, and 
about a dozen or more form the marginal series, all very short and radiating outward. In 
some of the paxillee the central spinelets are posed in such a way as to form incipient 
pedicellarize, in others three or four of the central spinelets are slightly longer, and are dis- 
tinctly pedicellarian in function. At the margin of the area an arrangement of the paxillee 
in transverse series may be observed, but is not very conspicuous at first sight, on account 
of the crowding of the paxillee, and is only well seen near the base of the rays. 
The supero-marginal plates, thirty-six in number from the median interradial line to 
the extremity, stand vertically, and, being confined entirely to the lateral wall of the 
ray, can hardly be said to have a distinct breadth on the abactinal area, excepting on the 
outer part of the ray, as they merge so gradually into the rounding of the lateral wall. 
On the outer part, however, they are more distinctly curved over and flattened on the 
abactinal area. The surface of the plates in relation to one another forms a continuous 
plane. On the inner part of the ray the height is about one-third greater than the length, 
and further outward than midway along the ray the dimensions are nearly subequal. The 
surface of the plates is closely covered with short obtusely tipped papilla, equal in length 
but slightly more robust along the median region of the plate; and all so closely placed 
