267 



Hurry Inlet, the south coast of Jameson Land. Just near 

 the beach, in very shallow water. 3. 8. 1891. 2 specim. Fry. 

 13.5—16 mm. 



Hurry Inlet. At the surface. 6.7.1900. 1 specim. 73.5 mm. 



Hurry Inlet. At the surface. 4.8.1900. 1 specim. 185 mm. 



Hurry Inlet. In a Bow-net. 4.8. 1900. 1 specim. 223 mm. 



Fleming Inlet. 118 fms. 24.8.1900. Dredge. 2 specim. 

 ?— 77 mm. 



Forsblads Fjord. 90—50 fms. 30. 8. 1900. Beam-trawl. 

 4 specim. 70, 71.5, 82.5, 92.5 mm. 



Bay (1. с p. 54) writes that it was very common in Scoresby 

 Sund. 



It was caught by the Germania-expedition at Sabine Ö 

 {»Gadus glacialis n. sp.» Peters I.e. p. 172). 



Lönnberg writes (1. с p. 13), that it was the most frequent 

 of all the fishes caught by the Kolthoff- expedition 1900, at 

 the North-eastern Greenland. 



E. Bay (I.e. p. 54) mentions Gadus saida from the field-ice 

 (68° 43' lat. N. 19° 14' long. W.; 75° 30' lat. N. 7° 11' long. W.) 

 and both he and So ren Jensen often observed some small 

 fishes, during their sailing among the field-ice, which they, 

 undoubtedly correctly, supposed to be G. saida. Jensen 

 thus writes in his diary (2—6. VII. 1900; ca. 72V2— 74V2° 

 lat. N. 4^3 — 6V2° long. W.): «Often when we struck against 

 the sheets of ice, a small fish appeared which I suppose to be 

 Gadus saida. It was sitting on the ice-foot in the corner 

 between this and the sheet of ice». «These last days where 

 we have been amongst rather compact ice many small fishes 

 have been seen (Gadus saida).» »Gadus saida is constantly 

 seen ; in the compact ice where the ship has great difficulty in 

 getting on it is frequently seen». Similar observations were 

 made by the Kolt hoff -expedition to East-Greenland 1900; 



