A. E. Verrill—Mollusca of the New England Coast. 405 
fins, 58™™; length of fins, 32™"; their breadth near base, 24™™; total 
breadth from tip to tip of fins, 130"; diameter of eye, 12%; 
breadth of gill-opening, 12"; length of siphon, 14"; length of 
dorsal arms, 125™"; length of web between dorsal arms, 70"; length 
of second pair of arms, 120™"; length of web between dorsal and 
first lateral arms, 60"; length of the third pair, 110"; length of 
web between third and fourth pairs of arms, 55™™; length of fourth 
pair of arms, 95"; breadth of web between the ventral arms, 35™™" ; 
diameter of largest suckers, 2°5™"; length of longest cirri, 3 to 4™™. 
A single specimen in good eonditiah was taken at station 2205, N. 
lat. 37° 35' , W. long. 71° 18’ 45”, in 1,073 fathoms, gray ooze, bottom 
Haiparhtuie 38° F., August 20, 1884. (No. 39,908.) 
Cirrhoteuthis megaptera Verrill, sp. nov. 
PLATE XLII, FiguREs 1, 2. 
Body small, very short, depressed, broadly rounded posteriorly, 
broader than long. Fins very long and narrow, their length consid- 
erably exceeding the breadth of the body, in alcoholic specimens ; 
toward the base they are much thickened and supported by an inter- 
nal cartilage, which does not appear to be continuous with the thin 
cartilage that extends across the body, just behind the fins. The 
fins are inserted just behind the eyes, and their breadth is somewhat 
greater in the middle than at the base; they narrow but little toward 
the tip, which is obtusely rounded. Head large and broad, exceed- 
ing the body in size and thickness in the preserved specimens, the 
greatest thickness being at the base of the arms. Eyes small, lateral, 
very far apart, the distance between them being, on the dorsal side, 
more than twice their diameter. Siphon short, conical, with a broad 
base. Gill-opening small, simple, only a little broader than the base 
of the siphon. Arms long, thick and strong, the dorsal ones a little 
longer than the others, which decrease successively to the ventral 
pair, which are, however, but little shorter than the third pair. The 
arms are thick and well rounded, especiaily on the basal portion, 
with the inner surface elevated along the median line, on which the 
suckers are arranged in a simple row; the marginal angles are but 
slightly indicated, and bear a row of small, slender, tapering cirri, 
alternating with the suckers, which are very small, urceolate, strongly 
elevated above the surface of the arms, and of a light yellow color, 
in strong contrast ,with the chocolate-brown of the arms. The dis- 
tance between the suckers along the middle portion of the arm usually 
