Synopsis of the British Becent Foraminifera. By E. B. Brady. 921 



Truncatulina haidingerii, d'Orbigny, sp. 



Botalina haidingerii, d'Orbigny, 1846, For. Foss. Vien., p. 154, pi. viii. 



figs. 7-9. 

 Planorhdina haidingerii, Brady, 1864, Trans. Linn. Soc. Lond., 



vol. xxiv. p. 469, pi. xlviii. fig. 11. 

 Shetland, 79 to 90 fathoms (Brady, Waller) ; estuary of the Dee 

 (Siddall) ; — the examples, so far as they have come under my notice, not 

 very typical. 



Truncatulina ungeriana, d'Orbigny, sp. 



Botalina ungeriana, d'Orbigny, 1846, For. Foss. Vien., p. 157, pi. viii. 



figs. 16-18. 

 Planorhdina ungeriana, Brady, 1864, Trans. Linn. Soc. Lond., 



vol. xxiv. p. 469, pi. xlviii. tig. 12. 

 Shetland, 75 to 90 fathoms (Brady, Waller) ; estuary of the Dee 

 (Siddall) ; south-west of Ireland (Wright). 



Anomalina, d'Orbigny. 



Anomalina coronata, Parker and Jones. 



Anomalina coronata, Parker and Jones, 1857, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., 

 ser. 2, vol. xix. p. 294, ph x. figs. 15, 16. 

 „ „ Brady, 1864, Trans. Linn. Soc. Lond., vol. xxiv. 



p. 469, pi. xlviii. fig. 13. 

 Shetland, 75 to 90 fathoms (Brady, Waller). 



PuLviNULiNA, Parker and Jones. 



Pulvinulina repanda, Fichtel and Moll, sp. 



Nautilus repandus, Fichtel and Moll, 1803, Test. Micr., p. 35, pi. iii. 



figs. a~d. 

 Botalina concaraerata (mature), Williamson, 1858, Eec. For. Gt. Br., 

 p. 52, pi. iv. figs. 101-103. 



The typical Pulvinulina repanda is represented by Fichtel and 

 Moll as a Ji)taline shell with its two faces nearly equally convex. The 

 form figured by Williamson, and generally met with on our shores, is 

 much more convex on the superior side than on the inferior, and the 

 sutures of the superior as^ject are marked by a certain amonnt of external 

 thickening or limbation. The latter form may be distinguished as var. 

 concamerata, Montagu, but it is impossible to separate the two by any 

 very constant characters. 



I find no record of the occurrence of Pulvinulina repanda on the 

 east coast of England or Scotland, nor in the Irish Sea. It is not 

 uncommon in coarse sands dredged on the north and west coasts of 

 Scotland and Ireland, and in the English Channel. 



Pulvinulina concentrica, Parker and Jones. 



Pulvinulina concentrica, Parker and Jones, 1865, Phil. Trans., vol. civ. 

 p. 393. 



