22 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 6l 



Family HIMEROMETRID^E A. H. Clark 



Genus AMPHIMETRA A. H. Clark 



AMPHIMETRA CRENTJLATA (P. H. Carpenter) 



Antedon decipiens 1S84. Bell, "Alert" Report, p. 159 (1, 2, 3, 4). 



Ante don irregularis 1(884. Bell. T. c, p. 161 (5, 6, 7). 



Actinometra Solaris 1884. Bell, T. c, p. 164 (8). 



Antedon variipinna 1888. P. H. Carpenter, "Challenger" Report, Comatu- 



lse, p. 256 (9, 10, 14). — 1894. Bell, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1894, p. 394 



(12, 13, 15, 17). — Brit. Mus., MS. (11). 

 Antedon philiberti Brit. Mus., MS. (16). 



1. Prince of Wales Channel; "Alert." — Two small specimens. 



2. Prince of Wales Channel; 7-9 fathoms; "Alert." — One speci- 

 men. 



3. Arafura Sea; 32-36 fathoms; mud, sand and shell; "Alert." — 

 One small specimen. 



4. Dundas Strait, northwestern Australia; ij fathoms; mud; 

 " Alert!' — One specimen. 



5. Prince of Wales Channel; "Alert." — Thirty-four small speci- 

 mens. 



6. Prince of Wales Channel; 7 fathoms; sand; " Alert." — Thirty- 

 six specimens. 



7. Torres Strait; 10 fathoms; sand. — Eleven fine specimens. 



8. Prince of Wales Channel; 5-7 fathoms; "Alert." — One small 

 specimen. 



9. Aru Islands; " Challenger." — Three specimens. 



10. Torres Strait; "Alert."- — Five specimens. 



11. 14° 50' S. lat., 125 40' E. long. — One small specimen. 



12. Holothuria Bank; 24 fathoms. — Six typical, large, very rugged 

 specimens, with the lateral processes on the pinnule segments 

 exceptionally well pronounced ; one of the specimens has ten, one 

 eleven, one twelve, one thirteen, one fifteen and one seventeen arms. 



13. Northeast of Holothuria Bank; 15-20 fathoms. — One small 

 specimen with fifteen arms. 



14. " Challenger " Station No. 186. — Two small specimens. 



15. Holothuria Bank; 38 fathoms. — Four small ten armed speci- 

 mens. 



16. Northeastern Australia; Professor J. B. Jukes. — One speci- 

 men. 



17. Baudin Island, Western Australia. — One specimen with greatly 

 exaggerated lateral processes on the segments of the proximal 

 pinnules. 



