128 THE DEPTH AND MARINE DEPOSITS OF THE PACIFIC OCEAN. 
Station 132, 28th October, 1899. 
Lat. 18° 0’ S.; long. 142° 29 W.; depth, 1620 fathoms. 
GLOBIGERINA OOZE: cream colored, granular, incoherent; appears to 
have been washed ; contains pelagic and bottom-living Foraminifera, small 
Lamellibranchs, otoliths, Ostracodes, Tunicate spicules, coccoliths, rhabdo- 
liths ; small particles of obsidian, felspar, and magnetite. 
Station 133, 28th October, 1899. 
Lat. 18° 5’S.; long. 142° 23’ W.; depth, 742 fathoms. 
GLOBIGERINA OOZE or CORAL SAND: very little material, from which 
it is impossible to state the type of deposit with certainty; cream colored 
with black grains (manganese), granular, quite incoherent; appears to have 
been washed; no fine amorphous clayey matter; consists of pelagic and 
bottom-living Foraminifera, Pteropods, Heteropods, Echinoid spines, otoliths, 
Ostracodes, Coral fragments coated with manganese; particles of obsidian 
and magnetite, mostly angular, mean diameter 0.1 mm. 
From this station the following specimens were taken by the trawl : — 
(1) Small branch of tree, about two inches long, rotten, and impreg- 
nated with manganese ; small strips of bark, one showing leaf seat; small 
piece of charred wood. 
(2) Piece of anthracite, angular, clean, showing conchoidal fracture in 
places, glistening, 2% by 2 by 1 inches. 
(3) Piece of coral-rock, showing structure of Coral clearly, 2 by 14 by 
1 inches, perfectly blackened inside and outside with manganese. 
(4) Flat oblong rounded piece of coral-rock or calcareous material, 
showing no structure of Coral, 1} by $ inches, blackened by manganese 
and impregnated with it; full of vesicular cavities containing very fresh 
and perfectly white pelagic Foraminifera, Pteropods, and Heteropods. 
(5) Flat rounded piece of calcareous material, same as above, 3 by 
+ inches. 
(6) Flat oblong angular piece of calcareous material, same as above, 
1 by § by + inches. 
(7) Rounded piece of soft white chalky calcareous rock, 4 by 4 inches, 
consisting of coccoliths, rhabdoliths, and fine amorphous calcareous matter. 
(8) Three angular furnace cinders, the largest being 3 by 1 by 2} 
2 
inches. 
