448 PROCEEDINGS OF UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 
from 123 to 262 fathoms, north latitude 75° 30’ to 80°, east longitude 
17° 50’ to 8° 15’, west of Spitzbergen. 
A few, mostly small, specimens of this species were dredged at dif- 
ferent points in the Gulf of Maine, in from 32 to 110 fathoms, 1873, 1874, 
and 1878, and in 88 tathoms (station 43), off Nova Scotia, in 1877. Mr. 
Whiteaves dredged it also in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in 1871, 1872, 
and 1873. Some of these northern specimens were labeled “‘Epimeria 
cornigera ?” by me, and have been so referred to by Mr. Whiteaves, in 
his reports on dredging expeditions to the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, in the 
Annals and Magazine of Natural History for November, 1872, and in 
the American Journal of Science, III, vii, 213, 1874; and by Professor 
Verrill, in the last named serial, vii, p. 407, 411, 1874, and ix, p. 414, 1875. 
Haploops setosa Boeck, Christiania Videnskabs-Selskabs Forhandlinger, 1870, p. 
228 (148); Scandinav. Arktiske Amphipoder, p. 541, pl. 30, fig. 7, 1876.—G. 
O. Sars, Archiv for Mathematik Naturvidenskab, Kristiania, ii, p. 360, 1877. 
Station 880; 252 fathoms; one specimen. 
I have examined numerous specimens of this species from different 
parts of the Gulf of Maine, the Bay of Fundy, off Nova Scotia, and from 
the Gulf of Saint Lawrence (Whiteaves). In the Bay of Fundy and 
off Nova Scotia the specimens were dredged in from 20 to 100 fathoms. 
Ptilocheirus pinguis Stimpson. 
Stations 865 to 867, 872; 65 to 86 fathoms. 
Ericthonius difformis Milne-Edwards.—Cerapus rubricornis Stimpson.—Smith, Trans. 
Conn. Acad., iv, p. 278, 1880. 
Station 861; 192 fathoms; three specimens. 
Unciola irrorata Say.—Glauconome leucopis Kréyer.—Smith, Trans. Conn. Acad., iv, 
-p. 280, 1880. 
Stations 865 to 867, 869 to 872, 876, 778; 65 to 192 fathoms. 
I 
Weohela phasma, sp. nov.—Neohela, nom. noy., vice Hela Boeck, proc. 
This species is apparently very closely allied to NV. monstrosa Boeck,* 
but has well-developed eyes, and the propodus in the second pair of 
gnathopods is different in form, besides other slight differences. 
Male—The head is about as long as and, including the stout lateral 
spines, fully as broad as the first somite of the perzon excluding its 
epimera; the anterior edge is slightly carinated and slightly concave in 
outline above the bases of the antennulie, leaving a slightly prominent 
and obtusely angular rostrum and a fully as prominent and more acute 
angle either side, just back of which the large and prominently convex 
eyes, salmon-colored in the recently preserved alcoholic specimen, are 
situated. The antennule are much longer than the rest of the animal; 
* Forhand. Scandinav. Naturforskeres Kigbenhaven, 1860, p. 669, 1861; Christiania 
Videnskabs-Selskabs Forhandlinger, 1870, p. 261 (181); Scandinay. Arktiske Amphi- 
poder, p. 6438, pl. 32, fig. 1, 1876. 
