34 SAN DIEGO SOCIETY OF NATURAL HISTORY 
The type of the new genus is Pseudophillipsia Sumatrensis Roemer. 
Macruros Crustaceans—Palacopemphix n. gen. P. Sosiensis n. sp. P. affinis n, sp., 
P. Meyeri n. sp. 
Brachyurous Crustaceans—Paraprosopon n. gen., P. Reussi n. sp. Oonocarcinus n. gen., 
O. insignis n. sp., O. anceps n. sp. O. Geintzi. 
Ostracoda—Cypridinella rostrata n. sp. C. inflata n. sp. GC. cypridellopsis n. sp. 
) 
Cypridella Jonesi n. sp. C. granulifora n. sp. Cypridina Adrianensis n. sp. C. ellip- 
tica n. sp. C. marginata n. sp. C. aff. C. primaevae McCoy. Philomedes acanthoides 
n. sp. Entomoconchus elongatus n. sp. Entomis polita n. sp. E. aequilobatus n. Sp. 
Beyrichia sp.? 
Girty (George TH.) Devonian and Carboniferous Fossils. 
U. S. Geol, Survey, Monograph No. 32, 1899; part 2, pp. 476-581. 
Proetus peroccidens H. and W., P. Loganensis H. and W. 
The author is inclined to include both of these species under one, but leaves it an 
open question. 
——— Notes on the Carboniferous Fossils, Geology and ore deposits 
Bisbee Quadrangle, Arizona. 
U. S. Geol. Survey, Professional Papers No. 21, 1904, pp. 46-53, 2 plates. 
Phillipsia peroccidens H. and W. figured the pygidium, pl. X, fig. 22. The species 
is rather characteristic of the Escabrosa Limestone. 
——— The Guadalupian fauna. 
Professional Paper U. S. Geol. Sur., No. 58, Washington, 1908. 
The author uses Anitopyge new genus for Phillipsia peranulata Shumard, 
The genus Phillipsia has 9 thoracic segments, and the new genus, as far as known, 
has but 7. In the pygidium the axis contains about 30 joints. 
Anitopyge is similar to Cheiropyge (a new genus described by Diener of Himalayan 
fossils) in the unequal segmentation of the axial and lateral portions of the pygidium— 
in Anisopyge the pygidium is surrounded by a broad, smooth band, while in Cheiropyge 
the lobes are extended so as to give this member a denticulate outline. 
The author describes Anisopyge anliqua n. sp. Cythere ? sp. Bairdia aff., B. 
plebeia Ruess, Argilloecia sp. : 
1 
he fauna of the phosphate beds of the Park City formation 
in Idaho, Wyoming and Utah. 
Bull. U. S. Geol. Sur., No. 436, Washington, 1910. 
The author describes and figures Hollina emaciata var. occidentalis n. var. Jonesiana 
carbonifera n. sp., which closely resembles the English species J. arcuta, but differs in 
a more equilateral form with a much narrower sulcus. 
Cytherella benniet J. and B, 
——— The fauna of the Moorefield shale of Arkansas. 
Bull. U. 8. Geol. Sur. No. 439, 1911. 
The author records an undetermined Griffithides and three Ostracoda, Paraparchites 
nicklesi Ulrich, Primitia moorefieldana n. sp. and Bairdia attenuata Girty. 
——— On some new genera and species of Pennsylvania fossils, from 
the Wewoka formation of Oklahoma. 
Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci., vol. 21, pp. 119-156, 1911. 
Describes Griffithides parvulus n. sp. Differs from G. ornatus in the configuration 
of the basal portion of the glabella. 
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