54 NEW- YORK FAUNA — CRUSTACEA. 



This singular crustaceous animal is found adhering to rocks in and near the water of West- 

 Canada creek. It is detached with considerable difficulty, and when so detached, partially 

 rolls itself up. It was thought a singular coincidence, that animals bearing so strong an ex- 

 ternal resemblance to trilobites should be found at the most remarkable locality in the United 

 States for these extinct animals. It is not supposed that they properly belong to this order, 

 to which, they are, however, allied by external form ; but the form of the mouth compels us 

 to arrange it among the Branchiopodal Crustacea, or Criistaces suceurs of more recent writers. 

 I feel much indebted to Mr. I. Cozzens for another species from Rye, Westchester coimty. 



, Fluvicola tuberculata. 



(state collection.) 



Description. Body ovate-oblong, sublinear, arched along the medial line. Anterior seg- 

 ment rounded in front, terminating in produced points on each side behind ; second and third 

 segments larger than the following, which become successively smaller ; the lateral segments 

 oblong, quadrangular : the whole disk margined with closely beset hairs as in the preceding. 

 On each side of the dorsal ridge, and closely contiguous to it, is a longitudinal series of abbre- 

 viated oblong elevations, which, on the three anterior segments, become more elongated, and 

 form a depression between them instead of a ridge. Near" this series, and parallel to it on 

 each side, is a similar series of somewhat oblique tubercles, and a third series more distant, 

 and apparently defining the boundaries of the lateral lobes. In desiccated specimens, these 

 series of tubercles, crossing the raised edges of the segments, divide the surface into a series 

 of quadrangular compartments. In other respects resembling the preceding. Color, reddish 

 brown. 



Length, 0-2 -0-5. 



Attached to stones in brooks at Rye, Westchester county. 



