60 NILS ODHNER, NORTHERN AND ARCTIC INVERTEBRATES. III. OPISTHOBRANCHIA ETC. 



— St. Helena (Pilsbry 1895). — New England, Gult' of St. Lawrence; Halifax (Wlii- 

 teaves 1901). Deptlis to 1073 fms. Mud, clay, stones. 



Philine polaris .\urivillius 1887. 

 Habitiit: 



North of Siberia: Aurivillius (1887), 3 fms, sand. 

 The Kära Sea: Leche (1878, Ph. punctata?), 10 fms, sand. 

 Spitzbergen: Shoal Point 80° N. 18° E., 40 fms, clay ('V, 1861, Malmgren) 

 2 shs. and rests of the animals. 



Philine lima (Brown 1827) 

 (incl. var. frigida Knipowitsch 1896). 



Hal)itat : 



Norway: Fmmarken: Ulfsfjord (Goés & Malmgren) 1 sli. ; D:o Kjosen, clay 

 (Goés & Malmgren) 1 sh. ; Grötsund 60-80 fms, clay (Goés & Malmgren) 2 sps. ; 

 Karlsö, N. of Tromsö, 70 fms (1861, Malmgren) 1 sh. — Bergen (Särs) 1 sh. 



The Kära Sea: Leche (1878), 20 — 26 fms, clay \vith sand. 



Spitzbergen: 3 sps. (Loven) without definite locality. — Sassen Bay, Ice Fjord, 

 10 fms, rocks and stones (Aug. 1861, Torell) 2 sps. — Cross Bay, 2 — 3 fms, clay 

 mixed with sand (Koren) 3 sps. — N. E. of the Seven Islands, 81° 14' N. 22° 50' E., 

 150 m, gray clay, bottom temp. + 2° C. ('Vs 1898) 1 sh. — Kings Bay, 20—25 fms, 

 fine clay, 1 sh. (var. frigida?). 



Iceland: Bern Fjord, 15 — 40 fms, clay (Torell) 13 sps. 



Greenland: Posselt (1898), 100—199 fms, clay, shells. Further: Claushavn, 15 

 — 20 fms, sand and algae (1870) 1 sp. — Umanak, 40 — 50 fms, clay (Koren) 1 s^. 



Newfoundland: 46° 5' N. 51° 44' W., 56 fms, sand and shells (Ing. & Glad. 

 "/s 1871) 1 sp. 



Oeiienil distribution: 



Norway: Vadsö 50 — 60 fms; Kjosen, Ulfsfjord 10 — 15 fms; Storeggen 400 fms 

 (G. O. Särs 1878); Hammerfest 20 fms (Friele & Grieg 1901). — North Atlantic, 2 

 local. 127—148 fms (Friele & Grieg 1901). — Murman coast (Pfeffer 1889; Herzen- 

 stein 1893). — Kära vSea (Collin 1887). — White Sea (var. frigida, Knipowitsch 1896). 

 — Franz-Joseph Land (Melville & Stånden 1901). — Spitzbergen (Krause 1892, Kni- 

 powitsch 1901, 1902). — Massachusetts (Whiteaves 1901). Depths 2—400 fms. 

 Clay, sand, stones. 



