116 EEPOKT — 1884. 



d. Wien, Tertiar.' p. 83, pi. x. fig. 5. Smitt says these species 

 should be placed very near to present one. — Semiescharipora 

 fragilis, D'Orb., 'Pal. Ter. Cret.' v. p. 480; Semiescharipora 

 brevis, D'Orb., ' Pal. Ter. Cret.' v. p. 485 ; Semiescharipora 

 oralis, D'Orb., p. 488 (fide Smitt, « Bry. Florida,' Ac). Some of 

 Reuss's species are described as Cellepora. 

 Range. — Eng. Chalk : Vine, ' B. Assoc. Rep.' 1883. Miocene : several 

 localities in Austria and Hungary ; Mount Gambier, Australia : Plio- 

 cene, Post-Pliocene. I have also in my collection a specimen similar to 

 our own Cretaceous form, from the Yellow Limestone (Cretaceous), 

 Timber Creek, K". America. Living: rather widely distributed. 



85. Ceibrilina punctata, Hassall (Hincks, p. 190) = Lepralia ibid., 



Hass., Johnst., Busk, ' Crag Pol.' 40, pi. iv., fig. 1. 

 Range. — Coralline Crag. Recent, very widely distributed. 



86. Ceibrtlixa annulata, Fabric. (Hincks, p. 193)= Cellepora annulafa, 



Fabr. = Reptescharella Heermannii, Gabb & Horn, ' Monog. 

 Polyz.' = Escharipora annulata, Fabr. (Smitt, ' Florid. Bry.'). 

 Range. — Scotch Glacial deposits. Living: Brit. Seas; Florida 

 (Smitt) ; Gabb & Horn's sp., Santa Barbara; Miocene (?). 



87. Cribrilina figularis, Johnst. (not C, ibid. ; Smitt, Florid. Bry.). 



Allied forms, Escharella Arge, D'Orb. (See Hincks, p. 197) 

 = Lepralia JJngeri, Renss, ' Ost.-ungar.' Seems to be a con- 

 necting form between C. figularis and G. radiata. Lepralia 

 Haueri, Reuss, closely allied to present form. 

 "Range. — ? Cretaceous, D'Orb. sp. ; Miocene, Reuss sp. ; Lower Coral- 

 line Crag (Bell). 



88. Cribrilina terminata, Waters (Hemeschara form), 'Quart. Jour. 



Geol. Soc' vol. xxxvii, p. 326; ibid. vol. xxxviii., p. 507; ibid. 

 vol. xxxix., p. 436, pi. xii. fig. 17. 

 Allied forms, Lepralia scutulata, Busk. 



The marginal cells of the American Cretaceous Eschar a digitata, Lonsd. 

 have their surfaces punctured below the orifice in a very similar manner 

 to G. ferminata, Waters, only not so thickly. The other cells are quite 

 plain. 



Range. — S. W. Victoria; Bairnsdale (Gippsland) ; Muddy Creek, 

 Australia. 



89. Cribrilina dentitora, Waters (Bactridiiform), ' Quart. Jour. 



Geol. Soc' vol. xxxvii., p. 326, pi. xv. f. 33. 

 Range. — S.W. Victoria, Australia. 



90. Ceibrilina suggerens, Waters. (Eschara form), op. cit. vol. 



xxxvii., p. 327, pi. xvii. fig. 75. 



' This is a most curious and instructive form, in which we are at the 

 outset met by a difficulty as to its generic position ; for, looking at the 

 aperture, we find it might belong to Cribrilina or Mucronella. With 

 the latter, however, in other respects there is little in common ; but 

 with Cribrilina we find the radiating character of the pores, and 

 although no known species has such a bristling surface, yet in C. Gattyce, 

 C. cribrosa, Heller, C. figularis, &c. there is a row of slightly raised pores 

 round the edge of the cribriform area.' — Waters. 



Range. — S. W. Victoria, Australia. 



91. Cribrilina tubulifera, Hincks. Waters, op. cit., vol. xxxix., 



p. 436. 

 Range. — Living, Bass Straits, Hincks ; Fossil, Muddy Creek, Australia. 



