CRUSTACEA MALACOSTRACA. III. 



169 



West of Iceland: Stat 89: Lat. 64°45' N., Long. 27°2o' W., 310 fath., temp. 8-4°; 1 spec. (ovig. ?). 

 — - — Stat. 9: Lat. 64°i8' N., Long, zfoo' W., 295 fath., temp. 5-8°; 11 spec. (1 $ with 



marsup.). 



Besides it has been gathered numerous times and by many collectors within the "Ingolf ' area. 

 Along the west coast of Greenland or more distant from the coast it has been captured from Umanak, 

 ab, Lat. 7o°4o' N., southwards to Nanortalik, in Lat. 6o°07' N., at fourteen localities, all — excepting 

 Jakobshavn — enumerated in Stephensen's Conspectus. At East Greenland it has only been found at 

 Angmagsalik, Lat. 65°3o' N., by Mr. Soren Nielsen. — It is common at Iceland, having been secured in 

 Dyre Fjord, Gnundar Fjord and H6fn Bugt on the north-western coast, in Gfjord and Skjalfandi on 

 the north coast, in Seydis Fjord on the east coast; around the Faeroes it has been taken numerous 

 times. The deepest station was in Lat. 6i°i5' N., Long. 9°35' W., 463 — 515 fath., and it has also been 

 taken in 340, 250, 190 and 60 fath. 



Distribution. Several specimens have been taken at the north coast and the most northern 

 part of the east coast of Jutland. It "occurs rather frequently along the whole coast of Norway, from 

 the Christiania Fjord to Vadso" (G. O. Sars). Besides it is known from "Lapponia Russica" (Schiodte 

 & Mein.); Barents Sea in Lat. 72°36' N., Long. 24°57' E., 140 fath., temp. 17 (Max Weber) ; Spitzbergen 

 (Miers, Ohlin); Scotland, north-eastern England and Ireland (various authors). -- Richardson recorded 

 it from Hudson Bay, Labrador, New Foundland, Nova Scotia, a number of places along the more 

 northern part of the east coast of the Unit. States, finally from the Gulf of Mexico between the 

 Missisippi and Florida, but this last-named locality seems to need confirmation. 



112. ^Ega tridens Leach. 



1815. ^Ega tridens Leach, Trans. Linn. Soc. Lond. Vol. XI, p. 370. 

 ! 1879. — — Schiodte & Meinert, op. cit. p. 340; PI. VII, figs. 1—2. 



! 1897. — — G. O. Sars, Account, II, p. 60; PI. 25, fig. 1. 



Occurrence. Not taken by the "Ingolf or any other of the Danish expeditions. But a spec- 

 imen taken on Gadus morrkua has been recorded from Thorshavu, the Faeroes (Sch. & Mein.), and 

 later another specimen has been procured at the same islands by the Physician Jorgensen (Copenhagen 

 Museum). 



Distribution. s£. tridens seems to be rare. G. O. Sars recorded it from Bergen and Chri- 

 stianssund on the south-west coast of Norway and from the Christiania Fjord. Besides it has been 

 taken north of the Shetland Islands in Lat. 6i°i5' N., Long. i°3o' W., no fath. (Zirwas), at both sides 

 of Scotland and at Belfast (various authors). 



113. JDga Stroemii Liitkeu. 



1859. y£ga Stroemii Lutken, Vid. Medd. Naturh. Foren. Kjobenhavn for 1858, p. 68, PL I. A, figs. 6—8. 

 ! 1879. — — Schiodte S: Meinert, op. cit. p. 349, PI. VII, figs. 10—15. 



! 1897. — — G. O. Sars, Account, II, p. 60; PI. 25, fig. 2. 



The Ingolf-Expeiiition. III. j. 22 



