44 THE PALEONTOLOGY OF MINNESOTA. 
[Anomalina, Pulvinulina. 
Sub-Family ROTALIN A. 
ANOMALINA, d’Orbigny. 
ANOMALINA AMMONOIDES [euss, sp. 
PLATE D, FIGS. 28, 29. 
Rosalina ammonoides REUSS, 1845. Verstein. fohm. Kreid., pt. 1, p. 36, pl. xii, fig. 66: pl. viii, fig. 53. 
Rosalina ammonoides, Id., 1850. Haidinger’s Naturw. Abhandl., vol. iv, p. 36, pl. iv, fig. 2. 
Nonionina bathyomphala, Id., 1862. Sitzungsb. d. k. Ak. Wiss. Wien, vol. xlvi, p. 95, pl. xiii, fig. 1, a, b. 
Rosalina weinkauffii, Id., 1863. Ibid., vol. xlviii, p. 68, pl, viii, fig. 97. 
Rosalina maorica STACHE, 1864. Novara-Exped., geol. Theil, vol. i, p. 282, pl. xxiv, fig. 32. 
Rosalina orbiculus, Id., Ibid., p. 285, pl. xxiv, fig. 34. 
Planorbulina ammonoides PARKER and JONES, 1865. Phil. Trans., vol. clv, p. 379. 
Discorbina ammonoides REUSS, 1865. Sitzungsb. d. k. Ak. Wiss. Wien, vol. lii, p. 456, No. 5. 
Rotalia capitata GUMBEL, 1868. Abhandl. d. k. bayer. Akad. Wiss., II, cl. vol. x, p. 653, pl. ii, fig. 92. 
Rotalia ammonoides, 1d,, 1870. Sitzungsb. d. k. bayer. Akad, Wiss., p. 283. 
Planorbulina (Anomalina) ammonoides JONES and PARKER, 1872. Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. 
xxviii, p. 106; table, p. 109. 
Planorbulina ammonoides REUss, 1874. Das Elbthalgebirge in Sachsen, 2/er Theil, p. 114, pl. xxiii, fig. 9. 
Anomalina ammonoides BRADY, 1884. Report on Foram., H. M.S. Challenger, Zool., vol. ix, pp. 
672, 673, pl. xciv, figs. 2, 3. 
“The shell is generally much compressed, and nearly equally convex on the two 
sides ; the peripheral edge is round, andthe aperture is placed almost symmetrically 
in the median line. Some specimens are depressed at both umbilici, others are 
umbonate at one or both ; sometimes the earlier convolutions are visible to a nearly 
equal extent on both faces. The coarse perforation of the shell wall is usually more 
conspicuous on the inferior than on the superior face.” Brapy loc. cit. 
Locality. Saline county, Nebraska, and South Chicago, Illinois. 
Anomalina ammonoides is a very common Cretaceous foraminifer in Europe: in America we believe 
this is the first time it has been noticed. 
PULVINULINA, Parker and Jones. 
Putvinutina HAvERI @’Orbigny, sp. 
PLATE E, FIG. 34. 
Rotalina haverii VORBIGNY, 1846. Foram. Foss. Vien., p. 151, pl. vii, figs. 22-24. 
Pulvinulina haverii PARKER and JONES, 1865. Phil. Trans., vol. clv, p. 393. 
Pulvinulina budensis HANTKEN, 1875. Mittheil. Jahrb. d. k. ung. geol. Anstalt, vol. iv, pl. ix, fig. 5. 
(Pulvinulina brongniarti, at p. 78). 
Pulvinulina hauerii BRADY, 1884. Report on Foram., H. M.S. Challenger, Zool., vol. ix, p. 690, pl. 
evi, figs. vi, vii. 
“P. hauerii. Testa ovata-convexa levigata, subtus convexa, umbilicata ; spira 
convexiuscula : anfractibus tribus externé rotundatis ; loculis convexo. Diam. + mill,” 
D’Orzsiany. (Foram. Foss. Vien., p. 151, pl. vii, figs. 22-24.) 
P. hauerii. Shell ovate-convex, smooth, convex below, umbilicate ; spire some- 
what convex, three whorls externally rounded, chambers convex. Diam. 4 mill. 
Locality. Wittle Fork river near Rainy lake, Northeastern Minnesota. 
