334 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [April, 



Island, 447-510 fathoms, black mud and rocks; 4,430, off Gull Island, 

 Santa Cruz Island, 197-281 fathoms, black sand, pebbles and rocks; 

 4,431, off Santa Rosa Island, 38-40 fathoms, mud, sand and rock ; 4,461 , 

 Monterey Bay, off Point Pinos Light, 285-357 fathoms, green m\id; 

 4,515, same, 368-495 fathoms, green mud, sand and shells; 4,531, 

 same. 26-28 fathoms, fine gray sand, pebbles and rock; 4,550, same, 

 50-57 fathoms, green mud and rock; 4,574, off Cape Colnett, Lower 

 California, 1,400 fathoms. Especially plentiful at stations 4,420, 

 4,421, 4,430, 4,431 and 4,461, most of the other stations yielding only 

 one or two specimens. 



' Lepidonotus sp. ? 



A nearly perfect Lepidonotus 12 mm. long was at first referred to 

 L. carinulatus Grube, a species that has been recorded from the Red 

 Sea and the Philippine Islands by Grube, from Japan by v. Marenzeller 

 and more recently from Ceylon by Willey. There exists a close 

 resemblance, especially in the character of the elytra between this 

 specimen and Grube's description but serious discrepancies arise with 

 Marenzeller's and even more with Willey's descriptions. The neuro- 

 podial setae are of the typical Lepidonotus type with no trace of a 

 true subapical spur, but the last pair of toothed plates is greatly de- 

 veloped and superficially somewhat resembles a spur, the remaining 

 ones being reduced in number and much reduced in size or even 

 obsolete. On the whole they resemble the corresponding setse of 

 L. coeloris but are more slender. 



On most of the etytra the horny bosses take the form of subcircular 

 bases rising into more or less compressed keels, many of which are 

 more or less irregular and spinous but which as a rule are smooth and 

 lack the sculpturing so evident on typical L. cccloris. Anterior elytra, 

 however, show traces of this sculpturing on the more conical papillae. 

 The marginal f I'inge is ver}^ long and extensive. The prostomium has 

 the typical Lepidonotus form quite unlike Willey's figure of L. carinu- 

 latus. Their color is pale brown with a light spot over the point of 

 attachment. 



On the whole it seems best to consider this specimen in'o\'isionaIly 

 as a variation of L. ca'loris. 



Station 4,496, off Santa Cruz Light, Monterey Bay, 10 fathoms, 

 fine gra}^ sand and rocks. 



Eunoe barbata sp. nov. PL XXVIII, figs. 1-6. 



Form moderately robust, dorso-ventral depth nearly equal to width 

 of body in -anterior half but the posterior tapering region much more 



