116 THE DEPTH AND MARINE DEPOSITS OF THE PACIFIC OCEAN. 
Station 61, 25th September, 1899. 
Lat. 15° 16’ S.; long. 148° 46’ W.; depth, 1762 fathoms. 
GLOBIGERINA OOZE: incoherent, cream colored, with slight tinge of 
pink; partly washed; containing pelagic and bottom-living Foraminifera, 
coccoliths, rhabdoliths, Tunicate spicules. 
Station 64, 26th September, 1899. 
Lat. 15° 51’ 8.; long. 148° 15’ W.; depth, 581 fathoms. 
CORAL SAND: white, gritty, quite incoherent; may have been washed ; 
consisting of broken Corals, Polyzoa, Echinoid spines, Pteropods, Hetero- 
pods, pelagic and bottom-living Foraminifera, Aleyonarian spicules, otoliths, 
small Gasteropods (Pleurotoma) ; obsidian fragment 1 mm. in diameter. 
Station 65, 26th September, 1899. 
Lat. 15° 57.3’S.; long. 148° 18.8’ W.; depth, 1363 fathoms. 
CORAL SAND or GLOBIGERINA OOZE: very small quantity of ma- 
terial, which has the appearance of having been washed; it is impossible to 
state with certainty the type of the deposit in situ. The sample is quite 
incoherent, gritty, and contains pelagic and bottom-living Foraminifera, 
fragments of Pteropods and Corals; grains and small concretions of man- 
ganese, the largest 2 mm. in diameter, small particles of obsidian. 
Station 66, 26th September, 1899. 3 
Lat. 16° 10’S.; long. 148° 26’ W.; depth, 2238 fathoms. 
GLOBIGERINA OOZE or RED CLAY: very little material; appears to 
have been washed; granular, incoherent, and of a brownish gray color; 
consisting of broken pelagic and bottom-living Foraminifera, Echinoid spines, 
Pteropod fragments, coccoliths, rhabdoliths; Sponge spicules; manganese 
grains and concretions. 
Station 71, 27th September, 1899. 
Lat. 17° 25.3’S.; long. 149° 26’ W.; depth, 775 fathoms. 
VOLCANIC MUD: grayish-black, clayey, gritty to the touch; appears to 
have been partly washed; contains about 20 per cent calcium carbonate, 
consisting of pelagic and bottom-living Foraminifera, Pteropods, Heteropods 
(Atlanta), otoliths, Ostracodes, small Lamellibranchs and Gasteropods (P/eu- 
rotoma), coccoliths and rhabdoliths, Tunicate spicules; one or two arenaceous 
