AET. 6 FORAMINIFERA: POLYMORPHINIDAE — CUSHMAN AND OZAWA 89 



The present Glohulina is a many chambered species. Its chambers 

 are rounded and short, each succeeding one is removed from the base, 

 and accordingly the test is becoming more or less oval and approach- 

 ing Pyrulina. 



Distribution. — Found only in the Miocene near Bordeaux. Besides 

 the type locality, it occurs in the Burdigalien inferieur, Moulin de 

 PEglise, Saucats, France. 



GLOBULINA species(?) 



Plate 22, figures 4 a, 6 



This peculiar form is figured here for reference. It is Recent 

 from Porcupine Station 16 oft" the British Isles. 



Genus PSEUDOPOLYMORPHINA Cushman and Ozawa, 1928 



PSEUDOPOLYMORPHINA UGUA (Roemer) 

 Plate 22, figures 5, 6 



Polymorphina ligua Roemer, Neues Jahrb. ftir Min. etc., 1838, p. 385, pi. 3, 



fig. 25. 

 Polymorphina compressa d'Orbigny, Foram. Foss. Bass. Tert. Vienne, 1846, 



p. 233, pi. 12, figs. 32-34. — H. B. Brady, Parker, and Jones, Trans. 



Linn. Soc, vol. 27, 1870, p. 227, pi. 40, figs. 12 c-/.— Schlumberger, 



Feuille des Jeunes Nat., vol. 12, 1881, pi. 1, fig. 16.— Bagg, U. S. Geol. 



Survey, Bull. 513, 1912, p. 69, pi. 20, figs. 1-9, 19-21; pi. 21, figs. 9-11. 

 Polym-orphina subcompressa d'Orbigny, Prodrome de Paleont., vol. 3, 1852, 



p. 159, No. 2976. 

 GuttuUna elongata Karrer, Sitz. Akad. Wiss. Wien, vol. 44, pt. 1, 1861 



(1862), p. 448, pi. 2, fig. 3. 

 Polymorphina amoena Karrer, Abhandl. k. k. geol. Reichs., vol. 9, 1877, 



p. 385, pi. 16 b, fig. 45. 

 Polymorphina inequalis d'Orbigny, Ann. Sci. Nat., vol. 7, 1826, p. 266, No. 4. — 



FoRNASiNi, Boll. Soc. Geol. Ital., vol. 19, 1900, p. 142, fig. 3 (in text). 



Test oblong, inequilateral, compressed ; chambers much longer than 

 wide, slightly inflated, arranged at the start in a quinqueloculine 

 series, becoming biseriai later, each succeeding chamber much farther 

 from the base; sutures slightly depressed, distinct; wall smooth, 

 rather thick; aperture radiate. 



• Length 0.65-2.10 mm.; breadth 0.42-0.80 mm.; thickness 0.28- 

 0.50 mm. 



Polymorphina ligua has long been neglected by later authors. 

 Reuss in 1864 compared the species with Polymorphina acuta and 

 said that they may be identical but Polymorphina acuta is not a 

 Polymorphina, but a Virgulina (examined by Ozawa). H. B. Brady, 

 Parker, and Jones put it in the synonymy of Polymorphina complanata, 

 with doubt. 



We examined material from the type locality, Oligocene of Cassel, 

 and found specimens like the figure given by Roemer. Our specimen 

 resembles Polyw.orphina compressa d'Orbigny, from the Vienna 



