/S'. I. Smith — Crustaceans of the Atlantic Coast. 
77 
Hippolyte pusiola Kroyer. 
Plate IX, figures 4, 5, 6, 7. 
Off Block Island !, 8 to 10 fathoms, rocky, 1874. Off Stoningtou !, 
Connecticut, 4 to 5 fathoms, rocky, 1873 (A. E. Verrill and D. C. 
Eaton). Vineyard Sound !, 2 to 12 fathoms, gravelly and shelly, not 
common, 1871 and 1875. Off* Nantucket!, 15 fathoms, 1875. Mas- 
sachusetts Bay!, off* Salem, 1877, 20 fathoms, rocks and gravel; 35 
fathoms, mud and clay nodules ; 48 fathoms, soft mud, — one speci- 
men. Oft* Cape Ann!, 50 fathoms, mud, gravel and rocks, 1877. 
Also, Salem Harbor !, 4 fathoms (J. H. Emerton). Casco Bay !, 1873, 
at low-water mark !, among stones, on Ram Island Ledge ; also at 
numerous localities in from 4 to 33 fathoms, rocky and gravelly, or 
“ hard ” bottoms, and abundantly in the stomachs of the cod taken 
on West Cod Ledge!. Jeffrey’s Ledge!, 24 fathoms, gravel and 
stones, 1873. Cashe’s Ledge!, 27 and 39 fathoms, rocks and gravel, 
1874, — abundant; abundant also near the Ledge!, in 52 to 90 
fathoms, 1873. George’s Bank!, 45 fathoms, coarse sand, 1872, — one 
specimen. BayofFundy!, 1864, 1868, 1870, 1872, 1876: not uncom- 
mon at low-water mark !, among stones and algae ; common in 5 to 
50 fathoms, rocky, gravelly and shelly bottoms; off* White Head, 
Grand Menan, 97 to 105 fathoms, gravelly, 1872. Le Have Bank!, 
45 fathoms, gravel and stones, 1S72, — abundant. Halifax, Nova 
Scotia!, 1^77: 16 fathoms, rocky ; 18 fathoms, tine sand; 25 fathoms, 
gravel; and one specimen also from 16 fathoms, mud. Gulf of St. 
Lawrence!, Orphan Bank and, in 10 fathoms, gravel, stones and 
broken shells, off* Sea-Cow Head, Prince Edward Island, 1873 (J. F. 
Whiteaves). Iceland (G. O. Sars). Lofoten Islands!, coast of Nor- 
way (G. O. Sars). Scotland! (Norman). North Sea (Norman, 
Metzger). 
I have not been able to discover any authentic record of the occur- 
rence of this species in Greenland. The statement, by Prof. Verrill 
and myself, in the Report on the Invertebrate Animals of Vineyard 
Sound, pp. 396 (102) and 550 (256), that it extends to Greenland, 
was made without any authority, and the including of Greenland in 
its geographical range by Kingsley (Bulletin Essex Institute, vol. x, 
p. 59), is probably due to our error, although Mr. Kingsley gives no 
authority for his statement. The species has, however, an extensive 
northern range, and will very likely yet be found in Greenland. 
Out of one hundred and six specimens in which the rostrum was 
specially examined, ninety-two (among which the males varied from 
