40 THE VOYAGE OF H.M.S. CHALLENGER. 



Station 122.— September 10, 1873; lat. 9° 5' S. to 9° 10' S., long. 34° 49' W. to 

 34° 53' W. ; 350 fathoms ; mud. 



Ophioghjpha sarsii, Lym., 111. Cat. Mus. Comp. Zool., No. i. p. 41, figs. 2, 3; Bull. 

 Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. v. part 7, p. 99 ; Ludwig, Anatomic der Ophiuren, Zeits. fur 

 wissen. Zoologie, vol. xxxi. p. 241. 



OpMolepis ciliata, Stimp., luvert. Gr. Manan; Smith, Contrib., vol vL p. 13, 1854. 

 OpMura coriaeea, Ltk., Vid. MeddeL, Nov. 1854, p. 7. 



Opliiura sarsii, Ltk., Vid. MeddeL, Nov. 1854, p. 7 ; Addit. ad Hist., part 1, p. 42, pL i. 

 figs. 3, 4. 



Station 49.— May 20, 1873 ; lat. 43° 3' N., long. 63° 39' W. ; 83 fathoms ; gravel, 

 stones. 



Ophioglypha meridionalis, Ljrm. 



Ophioglypha raericUonalis, Lym., BuU. Mus. Comp. Zool., vol. vi., part 2, p. 56, pi. xvi. figs. 

 447-449, 1879. 



Disk rather flat, covered with large imbricated scales. Arm comb of minute bead-like 

 papillae, scarcely to be seen above, but continuous along edge of genital scale. Three 

 peg-like arm spines less than half as long as a joint. Only one tentacle scale beyond the 

 mouth tentacles. 



(Type specimen from Station 320.) Diameter of disk 4 mm. Length of arm about 

 12 mm. Width of arm close to the disk 7 mm. Five small, short, broad, flat, close-set 

 mouth papilla3 on each side of the mouth angle, and one pointed and simUar to the teeth at 

 the apex. Mouth shields somewhat swollen, about as Inroad as long, with a curve without 

 and an obtuse angle inward. Side mouth shields short, straight, meeting by their full 

 width within, occupying only the inner angle of mouth shield. First under arm plate 

 blunt heart shaped, quite as large as, or larger than, the second, which is pentagonal, with 

 inner angle truncated, outer side gently curved, and laterals re-enteringly curved ; one- 

 third out on the arm the under plates are small, much wider than long, bounded ])y a 

 broad curve without and with a little peak inward. Side arm plates large and thick, 

 meeting broadly below beyond the second arm plate, and touching above beyond the third 

 plate. Upper arm plates long, wedge shaped, with a clean curve outward and a sharp 

 angle within. Disk rounded, rather flat and only a little arched above, covered by large 

 slightly swollen scales, whereof the primary plates form a conspicuous rosette, radiating 

 from which there usually is, in each interbrachial space, a row of three overlapping scales. 

 Eadial shields as broad as long, sunken, rounded, with a faint angle inward ; joined 

 without, separated by a wedge scale within ; they are smaller than the large disk scales. 

 Below, the scales are similar, eight or nine in each interbrachial space. Papillse along 

 edge of genital scale minute, bead-like, and continuous ; only one or two, and sometimes 



