Tin: ANN A 1.8 



AND 



MKiAZINE OF XATL'IJVL IHSrORY. 



[SEVENTH SHUIUS.] 



" piTlitoru spnrjjitc inusciim. 



Naiades, et circiini vitrt-os coiisidite foiitcs: 

 PoUice virjjineo t«-niTO» hlc I'lirpiti- ilores: 

 FloribtiH ct i>iftum, ilivao. ri'i>lete cnnistrmn. 

 At V09, o Nyuii'liffi Cr.itcriilfsi, itc aub undns ; 

 Iti", rt'ourvato vuriiitu eonillia trunco 

 Vi'llito luusi'OMJs e rupibus. vt milii conehus 

 Fertt", DeoB pelngi, et pingui conclivliii shpco." 



N. ParthtniiGiannelliisi, EpI. I. 



No. 25. JANUARY 1900. 



I. — Arctic Crustacea: Bruce Collectiou. By the 

 Rev. Thomas R. R. Stebbing, M.A., F.H.S. 



The Crustacea collected by Mr. W. S. Bruce in Franz-Josef 

 Land during- ISUG and 1807, in connexion with ihe well- 

 known Jacksou-IIarmsworth Expedition, have recently been 

 described by IMr. Thomas Scott, F.L.S., in the ' Journal of 

 the Liiinean Society.' In 189<S Mr. IJrucc made three new 

 Arctic cruises : the first with I\Ir. Andrew Coats in his yacht 

 'Blencathra' to Kolguev and Novaya Zemlya; the second 

 with the same friendly sportsman " to Bear Island, Hope 

 Island, across the Barents Sea almost to the north eml of 

 Novaya Zendya, and to the Wichc Islands" ; the third with 

 the Trincc of Monaco, on the ' Princessc Alice,' to Bear 

 Island, llojje Island, several parts of Spitzbergen, and the 

 Greenland Sea. 



As might have been expected, Mr. Bruce made every 

 possible use of his opportunities in the interests of natural 

 science. The Malacostraca thus obtained he has, on the 

 su|^gestion of JMr. Scott, submitted to me for determination, 

 and the following catalogue is the result. 



Ann. tt Mag. N. Iliat. Ser. 1. VoL\. 1 



