254 Messrs. Parker and Jones on 



§4. Deep-sea mud, ^gean Sea ; 1200 feet {E. Foi-hes, 1842). 

 (Monatsb. Berl. Akad. Wiss. 1854.) 



PL XXXV. A. XIX. A. 6. Rotalla glohulosal ^= Planorhulina glo- 

 hulosa (Ehr.), or Glohigerina^ 



With Spicules, Diatoms, Pol j cystines, and sand *. 



§ 5. Ajichor-mudj Cape Blanco^ West Africa. 

 PI. XXXV. A. XIX. B. 3. Galcarina atlantica = Planorhulina ? 

 With Spicules and Diatoms. 



§6. Anchor-mud, Spitzhergen. (Monatsb. 1841, p. 206; 

 Abhandl. 1841, p. 364.) 



PJ. XXV. A. XX. 9. Uvigerinal horealis. Indeterminable ; but 

 it may be four chambers of a Planorhidina [Truncatu- 

 lina) ? 

 With Spicules, Diatoms, and sand. 



§ 7. Beejj-sea Mud, South Pole ; 1620 feet, S. lat. 62° 42', 

 W. long. 55°. (Monatsb. 1844, p. 191. Sir James Clark Ross, 

 'Voyage in the Southern and Antarctic Regions,' vol, i. p. 344, 

 1847. Ann. Nat. Hist. no. 90, vol. xiv. p. 169.) 



PI. XXXV. A. XXII. 22. Guftidma? divergens ( = " Grammo- 

 5to??i?«w, 1844"). Indeterminable; it may perhaps be 

 a Bidimina. 

 With Diatoms, Spicules, Polycystines, and sand. 



§8. Sea-life of the Deep Atlantic. (Monatsb. 1853, p. 782 ; 

 1854, pp. 54-75, 236-250.) 



PL XXXV. B. IV. A. Group of Foraminifera, Spicules, Diatoms, 

 Polycystines, and sand ; from 10800 feet depth : mag- 

 nified 100 diameters. 

 e^f on. Globigerina, sp.? Glohigerina hulloides. 

 7 p-i 1- '>J9' Gloh. hulloides. 



^' * ' ' ^ * ■ \ A. Pidvinulina Menardii. 



i. -I ' \ Small thick-set Glohiqerina hulloides. 



(porosa. ) . '' 



k, I. ■, sp.? Glohigerina (small). 



n. Rotalia, sp.? Small Cristellaria or Noniojiina? 



o. Textilaria, sp.? Small stout 7^ext. gihhosa. 



p. Grammostomum aculeatum. Vidvidinaacideata (Ehr.). 

 With Spicules, Polycystines, Diatoms, and sand. 



* lu the ' Monatsberichte ' for 1858 (1859, pp. 10-30) Dr. Ehrenberg 

 has given short descriptions of eight " new genera " and seventy-one 

 " new species " of Foraminifera from the ^Egean Sea and the deep water 

 of the Mediterranean. Unfortunately this interesting catalogue is not 

 illustrated. 



