CALCAREA. 



(d) Alate trinulintcs from the dermal corUsx. Basal ray nearly straight, bluntly 

 pointed, 80 / to 140 M long x DM to 10 M thick. Paired rays unequal, 

 slightly curved upwards, often longer than the basal ray, 65 it to ISO/* 

 long x SM to 10 M thick Oral angle 100 to 110. 



The Qiinilrmulitites are of one sort : 



(f) A late quadriradiates from the gastral layer. Basal ray straight, tapering 

 uniformly to a sharp point, 500 M to 700 M long x 10 M thick. Paired rays 

 usually equal, slightly bent in either direction, 100 M to 230 M long x SM 

 to 11 M thick. Oral angle 130. Apical ray nearly straight, sharply 

 pointed, 70 M to 100 ft long x 6/u thick. 



Oscular spicules. The fringe is formed of oxea of types (a) and (b). 

 The oscular edge is formed of small quadriradiates similar to (f), but smaller. 

 Basal ray lOOyu long x 8/1 thick. Paired rays about 100/x lotig. 



DKRMATRETON HODOSONI.* 

 (Plate XXVII., Fig. 1, and Plate XXXII., Figs. 65-74). 



There is only one specimen of this new species in the collection. It is lient and 

 irregularly swollen (see Fig. I), the length being 60 mm. and the maximum diameter 

 14 mm., tapering at both ends to about 3 mm. It is quite white as preserved in 

 alcohol. To the naked eye the surface appears to be smooth and minutely reticulated 

 The walls are delicate, only 1 mm. thick at their thickest point 



The structure of the body wall is partly shown in Fig. 73. The flagellated 

 chambers open through contractile apopyles into excurrent chambers, three or four into 

 each, and these in turn communicate with the gastral cavity through large irregular 

 ports. The excurrent chambers have no proper skeleton, but are merely spaces left 

 between the proximal ends of the chaml>ers and the gastral layer. Four of the 

 flagellated chambers opening into an excurrent chamber arc .shown in Fig. 66. 

 The skeletons are drawn and the interior linings indicated by dotted lines. A cross 

 section of the same excurrent chamber is shown diagrammatically in Fig. 67. The 

 form of the excurrent chambers varies widely, they are often much deeper than the 

 one illustrated. The flagellated chaml>ers have ordinary articulated skeletons of many 

 joints, strengthened at the distal ends by oxea, which project a short distance beyond 

 the dermis, and also by long hair oxea, which project with the thicker oxea and extend 

 inwards nearly to the gastral layer. The " linked " arrangement of the flagellated 

 chambers is shown in Figs. 68, 69 and 70. Fig. 68 shows the ports in the gastral layer, 

 Fig. 69 the flagellated chambers just above the gastral layer, and Fig. 70 the same 

 chambers higher up, arranged in a "linked" pattern. All three figures are drawn 



The author venture* to name this specie* after Mr. T. V. Hodgson, the biologist of the Expedition, to 

 whose untiring industry and ingenuity the magnitude of the collection is due. 



vou iv. 2 L 



