Ofi (he Indian Stalked Uirn teles. 3S9 



longitudinal black fascia3 much widcucd at Ija.sc ; niesjiioturn 

 Nvitli two aiitt'iior obscure central obcoiiical spcjis ; tympanal 

 cavities ocliraccous ; a spot at base of fact', anterior mar^'ins 

 between face and eyes, lo<;s, opercula, se;;nicnlal maij^ins to 

 abdomen beneath, ami the anal segment ocliraccous or pale 

 teslaceous ; broad lon^^itudinal streaks to femora and bases of 

 tibiie piceous; tegmina and wings hyaline, the venation and 

 costal membrane, postcostal area, and lower basal streak to tho 

 first ochraceous, the up[)er vein to lower ulnar area emitted 

 iVom radial vein at about length of basal cell. 



Long., excl. tegm., ^ 21 mm. ; ex|). tegm. 65 mm. 



Hah. New South Wales (Coll. Dist.) • Sydney (Stockholm 

 Mu-.). 



LI 11. — Xatural History Notes from the R.I. M.S. Ship 

 ' Inveslijjutor,' Cajtt. T. II. lleniiny, /{.A'., conunandinf/. — 

 Series 11 L, No. 12. Prtlhni/uiri/ Report on the Indian 

 Stalked Barnacles. By N. A.nnanuale, D.Sc, Deputy 

 Superintendent of the Indian Museum. 



The Stalked Barnacles collected from time to time by the 

 Surgeon-Naturalist on board the Survey Ship ' Investigator' 

 were obtained between latitudes 5° and 27° north and 

 longitudes 50° and 99° cast, and with a few exceptions from a 

 depth of over 100 fathoms. Though the collection is not 

 very largt; as regards indnidual specimens, a considerable 

 number of forms are represented, a lar^ic proportion of whi(di 

 tail wiihm the genus Sculpellum. Several of these are new, 

 but licek's acutian*, veluiinum*, tenue*, and nov<e-zealandice* 

 are each re])resented by at least one characteristic example. 

 Over one half of the individuals, moreover, belong to 

 AVeltncr's Scalpelluni squantuHj'eruni, which is abundant in 

 the neighbourhood of the Andamans and occurs at a depth of 

 from 112 to 18-10 fathoms. Uur huge series of this species 

 is very uniform. 



In the present paper I projiose merely to describe tho 

 hermaphrodites or females of those tonus which are in my 

 opinion new f, all but two of them belonging to the aboNc- 

 nicntioned genus. My thanks arc due to Lieut. -Col. A. \V. 

 Alcoek, 1..M.S., F.R.S., JSuperintendent of the Indian 



• See my paper on " Malnysiau Burnaclea Sec." Memoirs of tho .\siutic 

 Society orUeiiyai, vol. i. (lOOi). 



t Only those forms wliieii nro represented by at least two speciuieus 

 have been described. 



