14 
station, 1, 2,3, 5, and 6. From the records it seems to be widely distributed in 
the Arctic and Subarctic regions. 
Polystomella arctica Parker and Jones. 
This circumpolar species occurs in the collection from Hudson Bay from 
station 5. I have already recorded it from the Canadian Arctic Expedition. 
There are numerous other specimens which have a form similar to this but 
have a single row of openings, but with a broad band of exogenous shell material 
above each suture. . 
FAMILY MILIOLIDAE. 
GENUS CORNUSPIRA SCHULTZE, 1854. 
Cornuspira foliacea (Philippi). 
In the Report of the Canadian Arctic Expedition I have given notes on this 
species. It has again been found in very similar form in these collections from 
Hudson Bay, occurring at stations 3 and 5. 
GENUS QUINQUELOCULINA D’ORBIGNY, 1826. 
Ouinqueloculina seminulum (Linné) ? 
This species was recorded from the collection of the Canadian Arctic Expedi- 
tion. It is recorded in most of the Arctic collections. Our specimens, however, 
are all of a stout, squarish shape, with a very highly polished, smooth surface. 
They were from stations 1, 2, 3, and 5, not common at any of the stations. 
In shape these specimens are nearest to the figure given by Parker and Jones 
(Phil. Trans., vol. 155, 1865, pl. 15, fig. 34) as Miholina (Quinqueloculina) 
oblonga (Montagu) from the Arctic. 
Quinqueloculina subrotunda (Montagu). 
Most of the lists from the Arctic include this species. It has occurred in the 
Hudson Bay collection at stations 2, 3, and 5. It was previously found in the 
collection of the Canadian Arctic Expedition. 
Quinqueloculina sp. 
There is a single specimen of an arenaceous Quingueloculina from station 5. 
It is dark red in colour and of different form from Q. agglutinans d’Orbigny. 
Parker and Jones record this arenaceous reddish form from the Arctic. 
Quinqueloculina sp. 
From station 6 there is a single large specimen very similar to that figured 
by Parker and Jones (Phil. Trans., vol. 155, 1865, pl. 15, figs. 36 a-c), and referred 
by them to Quinqueloculina ferussacii d’'Orbigny. It is not the same as 
d’Orbigny’s species and may possibly represent a distinct Arctic form. 
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