716 MESSES. E. HEEON-ALLEN AND A. EAELAND ON THE 



3 Stations. 



Large and typical examples at Stn. 11 and many smaller ones at Stns. 1 and 3, Unless 

 these specimens are derived from the Equatorial Drift, their presence in such shallow 

 water is difficult to account for. P. tumida is a pelagic species, and, apart from this, 

 its records are almost exclusively confined to tropical deep waters. 



410. Pulviiiulina patagonica (d'Orbigny). 



Rotalina patagonica d'Orbigny, 1839, FAM. p. 36, pi. ii. figs. 6-8. 

 Pulvinulina patagonica Brady, 1884, FC. p. 693, pi. ciii. fig. 7. 



Egger, 1893, FG. p. 413, pi. xvii. figs. 16-18. 

 Riiumbler, 1900, NPF. p. 13, figs. 4, 5. 

 „ „ Herou-Allen & Earland, 1913, CI. p. 137, pi. xiii. figs. 5-6. 



1 Station. 



A few fairly typical examples. Their presence in such shallow water is noteworthy. 

 We are dealing v.'ith the identity of the Clare Island specimens, for which we propose 

 to revive Brady's name P. scitula as a varietal name, in a paper which is now in 

 preparation, on the Foraminifera of South Cornwall. 



411. Pulvinulina truncatulinoides (d'Orbigny). 



Rotalina truncatulinoides d'Orbigny, 1839, FIG. p. 132, pi. ii. figs. 25-27. 



micheliniana d'Orbigny, 1840, CBP. p. 31, pi. iii. figs. 1-3. 

 Pulvinulina micheliniana Owen, 1867, SFMO. p. 148, pi. v. fig. 17. 



,, truncatulinoides lihumbler, 1900, NPF. p. 17, figs. 16-18. 



„ micheliniana Millett, 1898, etc., FM. 1904, p. 500. 



,, truncatulinoides Heron-Allen & Earland, 1908, etc., SB. 1909, p. 685. 



(On the discrepancies between these specific names, see the last three references.) 



2 Stations. 



One large and absolutely typical specimen at Stn. 3 and a small and weak example 

 at Stn. 1. 



412. Pulvinulina sclireibersii (d'Orbigny). 



Rotalina schreibersii d'Orbigny, 1846, FFV. p. 154, pi. viii. figs. 4-6. 



„ badensis Czjzek, 1847, FWB. p. 144, pi. xiii. figs. 1-3. 

 Pulvinulina schreibersii Parker & Jones, 1865, NAAF. p. 393. 

 Brady, 1884, FC. p. 697, pi. exv. fig. 1. 

 Egger, 1893, FG. p. 409, pi. xviii. figs. 31-33, 67-69. 

 „ „ Sidebotiom, 1904, etc., RED. 1909, p. 8, pi. iii. fig. 8. 



10 Stations. 



Generally distributed, but never very strongly developed or typical. Most of the 

 specimens are of a depressed type. 



