24 Canon A. M. Norman— iVb^es on the 



A number of specimens of tliis Thalestris were obtained in 

 gatherings from Bog Fiord, East Fin maris, and Svolvser, 

 Lofoten Islands. 



Thahstris ^wlaris^ T. Scott, 



1899. Thalestris polaris, T. Scott, " Crust, from Franz-Joi^ef Land," 

 Juiirn. Liun. Soc, Zool. vol. xxvii. p. 106, pi. vii. %si. 8-16. 



This species occurred in gatherings from Bog Fiord, Lakse 

 Fiord, Vadso, between tide-marks, and Varanger Fiord. 



Thalestris Jacksoni, T. Scott. 

 1899.- Thalestris Jacksoni, T. Scott, op. cit. p. 109, pi. viii. figs. 3-9. 



A single specimen of this fine species was obtained in a 

 gathering collected between tide-marks at Vadso. This 

 species attains to at least one tenth of an inch in length. 



Thalestris Clausii, Norman. 



1868. Thalestris Clausii, Norman, Brit. Assoc. Report, p. 297. 



A single female specimen was observed in the Finmark 

 collection ; it occurred in a gathering from Lakse Fiord. 



The fifth pair of feet in this specimen are foliaceous ; the 

 basal joint is subtiiangular, with a somewhat broadly but 

 irregularly rounded apex, which reaches to about the end of 

 the secondary joint and is furnished with six moderately 

 short and plumose setee round the lower inner margin and 

 end, but the first seta, counting from the inner margin, is 

 rather shorter and more coarsely plumose, and the space 

 between it and the next seta is greater than that between any 

 of the others ; moreover, the fourth seta, still counting from 

 the inside, is rather more slender than the other five ; the 

 secondary joint is broadly ovate, the breadth being equal to 

 about two thirds of the length; this joint is furnished with 

 six set£e on the lower outer margin and apex ; the basal part 

 of each of the three uppermost seta3 on the outer margin and 

 the innermost apical seta is comparatively stout, but they 

 become very slender towards the end ; the remaining two 

 £et0e, which are near the apex and are closer to each other at 

 the base than they are to those on either side, are rather 

 longer and more slender than the other four. Both the inner 

 and the outer margins of the secondary joint are ciliated. 

 Prof. G. S. Brady, in his ' Monograph of the British 

 Copepoda,' states that this is perhaps the most common of 



