142 



ENDEAVOUR SCIENTIFIC RESULTS. 



sented 1>\ seven specimens, the spines on the infraorbital ridge 

 are very strong and overhang the cheek below them. The 

 firs! dorsal, pectoral, and ventral tins, as well as the under 

 surface, are much darker than iii the others, and the pectoral 

 always has a light oval spot on its upper half. This form agrees 

 well with Bleeker's figure as regards the armature of the head, 

 but not in the colour. The second form only differs in having 

 the spines on the suborbital ridge smaller, and the colouration of 

 the tins lighter; the light patch on the pectorals is also 

 absent. It is represented by the remaining twenty-five specimens, 

 which agree perfectly with an example from Dr. Day's collec- 

 tion in the Australian Museum, from Madras. 



Loc.—A\] the "Endeavour" specimens were trawled seven 

 to twenty miles off Bowen, Queensland, in 15-35 fathoms, on a 

 muddy bottom: August 2 and 3, 1910. 



[nsidiatof tubercolatus, Guvier 8f Valenciennes. 



(Plate xxix. ; Fig. 10.) 



Platycephahis tuberculatus, Cuvier & Valenciennes, Hist. Nat. 

 Poiss., iv., 1829, p. 258. Id., Giiuther, Brit. Mus. Cat. 

 Fish., ii., 1860, p. 186. Id., Day, Fish. India. 1878, 

 p, 275, pi. lx., fig. 5. 



I), viii.-ix. 11 ; A. 11 ; P. 20-22; V. i. 5; C. 11 ; L. lat. 52- 

 53. Head 2.6 in the length to the hypural. Eye 3.6-3.8 in the 

 head, and equal to, or a little shorter than the snout, which is 

 3.2-3.6 in the head. Interorbital width 3-3.6 in the eye. Third 

 dorsal spine 2.06-2.7 in the head. 



Fig. 10. Upper view of head and teeth of Insidiator tuber culatus. 



Mead rough, with all the exposed ridges minutely serrated. 

 Two or three anterior orbital spines; supraorbital margin 

 elevated, consisting of a single row of denticles anteriorly, and 

 one or two behind. Interorbital space concave. The whole 



