84 ‘* ENDEAVOUR” SCIENTIFIC RESULTS. 
Astroconus australis or not, it does not seem to me possible to 
draw a subfamily distinction between them, as Déderlein does, 
and place one in the Astrocheline and the other in the 
Gorgonocephaline. If these two groups are worth dis- 
tinguishing as subfamilies, I think Conocladus must certainly 
be put in the Gorgonocephaline. 
Locs.—Thirty-five miles south-east of Bruni Island, Tas- 
mania, 150-230 fathoms. 
North-east of Cape Pillar, Tasmania, 50-80 fathoms. 
Bay of Fires, Tasmania, 40 fathoms. 
Twenty miles east of Babel Island, Bass Strait, 35 fathoms. 
Between Devonport and Launceston, Tasmania. 
Eastern Slope, Bass Strait, 70-100 fathoms. 
Off Gabo Island, Victoria, about 200 fathoms. 
Thirty-six miles N. 58° E., of Cape Wickham, King Island, 
Bass Strait. 
South-east coast of Australia. 
Coast of Victoria. 
Forty miles west of Kingston, South Australia, 30 fathoms. 
Off Murray River mouth, South Australia, 17 fathoms. 
Sanders Bank, Kangaroo Island, South Australia, 28 
fathoms. 
Fifteen miles south of Cape Wiles, South Australia. 
Fifty miles south of Cape Wiles, South Australia, 75 
fathoms. 
South-east of Flinders Island, South Australia, 37 fathoms. 
Fifteen miles south of St. Francis Island, South Australia, 
30 fathoms. 
Genus ASTRODENDRUM, Déderlein. 
ASTRODENDRUM PUSTULATUM,! sp. nov. 
(Plate xxxiv., fig. 1-2.) 
Disk diameter, 40 mm.; arms, divided about 8 times, 
approximately 225 mm. long, measured from mouth; one 
arm measured as follows, by divisions, the figures, however, 
being only approximate : from mouth to first fork, 20 mm. ; 
second division, 12 mm.; third, 13 mm.; fourth, 30 mm. ; 
1. Pustulatus=having blisters or pustules ; in reference to the pimple 
like elevations on the disk. 
