INDEX. 



217 



Stalked crinoids, ii. 116. 

 Starfishes, ii. 102. 



bathymetrical range of, ii. 107. 



known previous to "Blake" Expedi- 

 tion, ii. 4. 



prominent deep-sea families, ii. 102. 



Report on, by E. Perrier, i. xxi. 

 Staurophora, i. 177. 

 Stauroteuthis, i. 191. 

 Steindachneria, ii. 26. 

 Stellwagen cup, samples brought up by, 



i. 2<;i. 



Stenocyathus vermiformis, ii. 148. 



Stenoteuthis, i. 191. 



Stenoteuthis Bartrami, ii. 58. 



Stephanomia, i. 184. 



Stephanotrochus diadema, ii. 149, 150. 



Sternoptyx diaphana, ii. 22. 



Sthenelais simplex, ii. .")4. 



Stichopus natans, ii. 85. 



Stimpson, i. 43. 



Straits of Florida, warm current from, i. 241. 



Studer, on coral reefs, i. 7<>. 



on deep-sea siphonophores, i. 184. 

 Stylaster filogranus, ii. 139, 140. 

 Stylasterida3, ii. 138. 

 Stylifer, ii. 64. 



Stimpson on, parasitic of annelids, ii. 64. 

 Styliola, i. 187, 265. 

 Stylodactylus, ii. 46. 

 Stylorhiza stipitata, ii. 177- 

 Submarine banks, discovered by "Challen- 

 ger," i. 64. 



discovered by " Tuscarora," i. 64. 

 Submarine cables, i. 2. 

 Submarine deposits, i. 260. 



John Murray, Report on, i. xxi. 

 Submarine disturbances, i. 104. 

 Submarine landscapes, i. 103. 

 Submarine plateaux, formation of, i. 77- 

 Submarine ridges, i. 245. 

 Submarine scenery, monotony of, i. 106. 

 Submarine slopes, steepness of, i. 102. 

 Sulcastrella clausa, ii. 176. 

 Sulphate of lime, amorphous, i. 149. 

 Surface algae, field of, i. 313. 

 Surface animals in bottom deposits, i. 285. 

 Surface fauna, A. Agassiz, Report on, i. xxi. 

 Swordfish, sounding of, ii. 24. 

 Syllis, phosphorescent species of, i. 199. 

 Symbiosis, i. 215. 



De Bary on, i. 214. 

 Synaphobranchus pinnatus, ii. 34, 35. 

 Syscenus infelix, ii. 48. 



Tactile organs of deep-sea fishes, ii. 22. 



"Talisman," Expedition .t the. i. I". 



Tangle bar, i. 85, 



Tanner on ridge between Santa Cruz and 



Porto Rico, i. 222. 



Tasmania, relation to Australia, i. lu:>. 

 Telegraph cable, animals on, i. I". 

 Temuechinus inaculatiis. ii. 92. 

 Temperature at one thousand fathoms, i. ii-K 

 Temperature, belt of falling, i. :J(U. 



belt of uniform, i. 301. 



between Bahamas and Bermudas, i. 237. 



condition of, below five hundred fath- 

 oms, i. :;<>L>. 



differences of, over extensive areas, i. 

 303. 



effect upon fauna by change of, i. 111). 



highest, to which man is subject, i. o<>|. 



increase of, in interior of the earth, i. :JO;;. 



in Florida Straits, i. 24U. 



lowest, found by " Challenger," i. 246. 



lowest, found by "Porcupine," i. :M~). 



lowest, to which man is subject, i. 301. 



of bottom of ocean, Gardner on, i. \ ''>-. 



of eastern and western continental shores, 

 i. 244. 



of ocean, Foster on, i. 46. 



of sea-water of greatest density, i. 248. 



range of, for marine animals, i. 301. 



seasonal differences of, i. 246. 



uniform in deep water, i. 164. 

 Temperature and light in the tropics, i. 164. 

 Temperatures, of the Caribbean, i. 217. 



of the Gulf of Mexico, i. 217. 



of the Western Atlantic, i. 217. 



off Barbados, i. 227. 



off leeside Windward Islands, i. 228. 



off Salines Point, Grenada, i. 228. 



variable belt of, i. 247. 

 Temperature sections : 



across Mona Passage, i. 223. 



across Windward Passage, i. 224. 



across Yucatan Channel, i. 219, 230. 



by "Albatross" in Caribbean, i. 217. 



from Cape Florida to Gun Key, i. 232. 



from Dominica to Martinique, i. 222. 



from Halifax to Bermuda, i. 244. 



from Jamaica to San Domingo, i. __'"> 



from Jupiter Inlet to Memory Rock, L 

 282, 



from Madeira to Tristan da Cunha, i. 

 242. 



from Martinique to St. Lucia, i. 222. 



from Mexico to Florida, i. 231. 



from Pernambuco to Fernando Noronha, 

 i. 227. 



from Santiago de Cuba to Jamaica, i. 226L 



