Synopsis of the British Recent Foraminifera. By H. B. Brady. 887 

 Sub-family 3. Saccammininse. 



PSAMMOSPH^EA, Schulze. 



Psammosphmra fusca, Schulze. 



Psammosphiera fusca, Schulze, 1874, II. Jahresberichte d. Komm. 



Unters. d. deutsch. Meere in Kiel, p. 113, 

 pi. ii. fig. 8. 

 „ „ Brady, 1879, Quart. Journ. Micr. Sci., vol. xix. 



N.S. p. 27, pi. iv. figs. 1, 2. 

 Loch Scavaig, 45 to 60 fathoms (Brady) ; Portree Bay, Skye ; off 

 Cumbrae, 60 fathoms (Robertson) ; Lambay Deep (Balkwill and Wright) ; 

 south-west of Ireland, 48 to 110 fathoms (Wright) ; doubtful specimens 

 from the estuary of the Dee (Siddall). 



Sub-family 4. Rhabdammininse. 



Jaculella, Brady. 



Jaculella acuta, Brady. 



Jaculella acuta, Brady, 1879, Quart. Journ. Micr. Sci., vol. xix. N.S. 

 p. 35, pi. iii. figs. 12, 13. 



„ „ Siddall, 1879, Cat. Brit. Eec. Foram., p. 4. 



St. Magnus Bay, Shetland, 60 fathoms (Norman) ; ofi" Cumbrae, 

 60 fathoms (Eobertson) ; off Belfast Lough, 50 to 60 fathoms (Wright). 



Hyperammina, Brady. 



Hyperammina elongata, Brady. 



Hyperammina elongata (pars), Brady, 1878, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., 



ser. 5, vol. i. p. 433, pi. xx. fig. 2. 

 Eobertson, 1880-81, Proc. Nat. Hist. Soc. 

 Glasgow, vol. V. pp. 12, 163. 

 Off Cumbrae, and off Portree Harbour, dredged (Eobertson) ; estuary 

 of the Dee, very rare (Siddall) ; Lambay, 45 to 50 fathoms, abundant ; and 

 at a few other places in the Irish Sea (Balkwill and Wright) ; between 

 Belfast Lough and Portpatrick, 100 fathoms, and south-west of Ireland, 

 79 to 110 fathoms (Wright). 



Hyperammina arborescens, Norman, sp. 



Psammatodendron arborescens (Norman MS.), Brady, 1881, Denkschr. 

 d. k. Akad. Wiss. Wien, vol. xliii. p. 98, No. 13 ; — Ann. and Mag. 

 Nat. Hist., ser. 5, vol. viii. p. 404. 

 Hyperammina arbuscida, Eobertson, 1881, Proc. Nat. Hist. Soc. 

 Glasgow, vol. V. p. 163. 

 „ arborescens, Brady, 1884, Challenger Eeport, p. 262, 



pi. xxviii. figs. 12, 13, woodcut, fig. 10. 

 Dredged between Cumbrae and Bute, 50 fathoms ; very common in 

 the Frith of Clyde from 20 to 70 fathoms (Eobertson) ; between Belfast 

 Lough and Portpatrick, 30 to 60 fathoms (Wright). 



