24 SAN DIEGO SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY 
CLARKE (J. M.)—Continued. 
New York Devonic us Dalmanites concinna var. serrula in 1888, and referred to 
Cryphina serulla. 
The author in view of the known variation between Cryphaeus and Hausmannia 
places the new genus with a caudal extensicn in his new genus. ‘The head differs 
from that of Cryphaeus. The author describes in addition to the type Calmonia 
signifer var. micrischia noy., C. subseciva nov. and C. ocellus Lake, described by Lake 
under the genus Phacops from South Africa. C. ? gonzana Clarke. 
Pennaia new genus type, P. pauliana nov. 
A very distinct variation of the Mesembria type of Dalmanites is expressed by 
Pennaia pauliana. In general aspect it is distinctly more Phacopidean than Calmonia, 
in respect: first, to the head, in which all parts are more compact and condensed; 
second, in the thorax, where the axis is relatively much broader than the side lobes, 
while the ends of the anterior segments are rounded rather than lanceolate; third, in 
the pygidium, which is phacopidean in its small size and sparse segmentation. The 
margin of the pygidium is fimbriate, bearing three flattened spinules on each side. 
Proboloides gen. nov. type. P. cuspidatus and P. pessulus nov. 
In the possession of a frontal snout on the head this species is a Probolium after the 
type of snouted Dalmanitids, but in respect to the character of the snout, the form of 
the cephalon, its style of lobation and smoothness of surface, it departs from the type 
and is an expression of the Mesembria structure. 
The author proposed the term Phacopina in place of Phacopidella, which Reed uses 
for Acaste, a preoccupied term. f 
and Swartz (Charles K.) Trilobita. 
Geol. Sur. Maryland Upper Devonia, Baltimore, 1913, p. 699. 
Phacops rana Green, 1832. 
— Report of Director, 1913. 
New York State Mus. Bull. 173, 1914. 
Restoration of Pterygotus buffaloensis, also of Eusacus and that of Stylonurus ex- 
celsior. 
Cleland (Herdman F.) Further notes on the Caleiferous (Beekman- 
town) formation of the Mohawk Valley, with descriptions of new species. 
Bull. Am. Paleontology IV, No. 18, 1903, pp. 37-50, plates. 
Bathyurus ellipticus nov. sp.’ Harrisia parabola nov. sp. 
Crossmann Rey. Crit. Paleont., replaces the preoccupied named of Harrisia to that of 
Clelandia. 
The fossils and stratigraphy of the Middle Devonie of Wis- 
consin. 
Wisconsin Geol. and Nat. Hist. Sur. Bull. 21, 1911. Chapter X, Crustacea. 
The Middle Devonic formation in Wisconsin has yielded very few crustacean re- 
mains. The most widespread trilobite is Phacops rana. 
The author describes and illustrates Proetus Rose: Green. Phacops rana Green. 
Proetus crassimarginatus Hall. 
Ostracoda: Bollia ungula Jones. Barychilina walcotti Jones. Kirkbya subquadrata 
Ulrich. Ulrichia conradi Jones. 
Phillopocarida: Echinocaris punctata Hall, and Tropidocaris sp. ? 
A study of the fauna of the Hamilton formation of Cayuga 
Lake section in central New York. 
Bull. U. S. Geol. Sur., No. 206, 1903, 112 pp., 5 plates. 
The author gives a list of Crustacea on pp. 79-81, with notes on their occurrence. 
