BRACHIOPODA. 136 



development cas a conspicuous character of the interior ; vide D. reversa ? PI. 96, 

 fig. I, 3 A, 4 A, 5 A, 6 A ; /;. tarda, PI. 96, fig. V, 4 a ; 1). rugata ?, PI. 98, fig. I, 

 6 c ; D. intermedia, PI. 99, fig. VI, 1 a, 2 a, 3 a, 4 a (Systvmo Sihn-ien, vol. v, 

 1879). 



The fos.sils which have been referred to Orbiculoidea, Davidson, not 

 D'Orbigny, the best known of which are O. Forbesi, Davidson, and O. conica, 

 Dwight, differ from all the foregoing in having the perforated valve very con- 

 vex and the imperforate one depressed-conical (0. Forbesi), or Hat (O. conica). 



This convexity of the pedicle-valve attains an amazing development in Pro- 

 fessor Dwight's remarkable species, the umbo being prolonged into a high cone, 

 with the apex inclined toward the anterior margin of tlie shell. The same 

 inclination is observable in specimens of O. tenuilamcllata , from the Niagara 

 group at Hamilton, Ontario, but only to a slight degree. 



The pedicle-groove has essentially the character seen in Orbiculoidpu, 

 D'Orbigny, but is usually much more distinctly retaiiied on account of the 

 greater thickness of the shell, which is in striking contrast to its tenuity in the 

 last named group. A question may fairly arise as to the advisability of con- 

 sidering the diflerences mentioned in these two groups as of generic importance, 

 but it was upon a strictly congeneric species that Kutorga established the genus 

 ScHizoTRETA, a name which has uniformly been regarded as a synonym for 

 DisciNA ^ Orbiculoidea, Davidson, since Professor Morris' observation.s on tlie 

 subject in the Annals and Magazine of Natural History in 1849.* 



To apprehend the proper status oi' this group, Kutorga's diagnosis is ap- 

 pended : 



ScmzoTRETA, Kutorga. Ueber die Siphonotretaete ; Verhandl. der russ.-kais. 

 mineral. Gesellsch. zu St. Petersburg, pp. 272, 273. 1848. 



" The chief character of this genus lies in the peculiar external slit-shaped 

 pedicle-aperture, the position of which is precisely the reverse of that in the 

 preceding genera | SiPiiOiNOXRETA, etc.]. The apex of the beak is greatly ele- 

 vated, but far from being in the center of the valve, and from it passes over 

 the strongly convex cardinal slope of the cone, toward the posterior margin, a 



* Second Series, vol. iv, p. 31"). 



