178 THE RECENT CRINOIDS 
Jobi (von Rosenberg). — This specimen has already 
been described in detail by Carpenter. It resembles very 
closely the specimen from Fiji in the Copenhagen Museum 
which I have described, and which was mentioned by 
Carpenter in the »Challenger’” Report (vol. 26, Zoology, 
p. 298). There are from four to six post-radial axillaries; 
four of the IIBr series are 2, and six are 4 (3-+ 4). 
Comaster novze-guinez (J. Müller). 
Alecto nove-guinew 1841. J. Mörrer, Archiv für Natur- 
geschichte, 1841, I, p. 146. 
Comaster nove-guinee 1908. A. H. Crark, Proc. U. S. 
Nat. Mus., vol. 33, p. 686. 
Eidouma: New Guinea (Salomon Müller). — 
There are fifteen cirrus-sockets and one segment of a 
single cirrus remaining. The specimen has the same smooth 
appearance as the specimen of Liitken’s Actinometra stellata 
(i. e., Comaster typica) from Fyi in the Copenhagen Museum. 
Compared with the specimen of C. typica at hand (see 
p. 177; also vol. 3, p. 195) the only differences to be 
found are the lesser number of arms and the thinly discoidal 
centrodorsal, on which are cirrus-sockets. It almost entirely 
lacks the rough and spinous characters presented by the 
Philippine specimens recorded by myself as nove-guinew 
(Smiths. Miscell. Coll., Quarterly Issue, vol. 52, part 2, 
p. 204, Phanogenia nove-guinee) and may very possibly 
turn out to be after all synonymous with typica. 
Comantheria alternans (P. H. Carpenter). 
Actinometra alternans 1881. P. H. Carpenter, Notes from 
the Leyden Museum, vol. 3, p. 208. 
No locality. — This specimen has about ninety arms; 
the division series are regularly alternating, the IIBr series 
being 4 (3 + 4), the IIIBr series 2, the IV Br series 4 (3 + 4), 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XX XIII: 
