S. I. Smith — Crustaceans of the Atlantic Coast. 
47 
red algae, 1877. I have never seen specimens from the Gulf of St. 
Lawrence nor Labrador and can find no record of its occurrence on 
our eastern coast north of Halifax. I have little doubt however that 
it occurs in the southern part of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. 
On the European coast it is found from Finmark (M. Sars) and the 
rest of the Norwegian coast! (G. O. Sars) to the Baltic, the North 
Sea! (Mobius, Metzger), the British Islands! (Norman), and south to 
the coast of France (Milne-Edwards). 
It is also reported from the region of Bering Sea by Owen and 
Brandt, and by Stimpson from Puget Sound. 
Eupagurus longicarpus Stimpson ex Say. 
Egmont Key!, west coast of Florida, common (Col. E. Jewett). 
Charleston, South Carolina (Gibbes). Fort Macon !, North Carolina, 
abundant (Coues, Packard). Also abundant on the coast of New 
Jersey!, 1871; southern shore of Long Island!, 1870; throughout 
Long Island Sound ! ; Block Island Sound !, 1874 ; Gardiner’s !, Great 
Peconic ! and Little Peconic ! Bays, Long Islaud, 1874; Buzzard’s 
Bay!, and Vineyard Sound!, 1871, 1875. Cape Cod Bay!, 1875, 
and Provincetown !, Massachusetts, 1872. Salem, Massachusetts 
(Kingsley, Proceedings Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 1878, p. 326). 
Common at low-water, in a shallow and sheltered cove at the upper 
end of Quahog Bay!, an arm of Casco Bay, 1873. 
It is most abundant at low-water or between tides on muddy and 
sandy shores and is seldom if ever found below 10 fathoms. 
Eupagurus pubescens Brandt ex Kroyer. 
Off the coast of New Jersey!, latitude 40° north, longitude 73° 
west, 32 fathoms, inhabiting shells overgrown with Epizoanthus 
Americanus Yerrill (Capt. Gedney). Off Block Island !, 14 fathoms, 
sand and gravel, 1874. Stellwagen’s Bank!, 22 to 44 fathoms, sand, 
1873, — abundant. Massachusetts Bay!, off Salem, 1877: 22 and 45 
fathoms, gravel; 33, 35 and 36 fathoms, sand and mud; and abund- 
ant in 48 to 50 fathoms, mud. Gulf of Maine !, off Cape Ann : seven 
miles southeast by east one-half east from Cape Ann, 75 fathoms, 
soft mud, 1878, — abundant; thirteen miles southeast from the same 
point, 50 fathoms, mud and stones, 1878; and fourteen miles south- 
east from the same point, 90 fathoms, soft mud, 1877, — abundant and 
very large. Off Massachusetts Bay!, latitude 42° 20' north, longi- 
tude 70° west, 117 fathoms, soft blue mud, 1873. Common in Casco 
Bay !, 1873, on muddy, sandy, shelly and spongy bottoms in 10 to 48 
