46 CRUSTACEA MALACOSTRACA. IV. 



South-West of the Faeroes: Lat. 6i°i5' N., Long. 9°35' W., 463 — 515 fath. ; many specimens. 



Lat. 6i°07' N., Long. 9°3o' W., 443 fath.; large number of specimens. 



Distribution. Found "along the whole south and west coast of Norway, as far north as the Lo- 

 foten Islands", in 60 to 100 fath. (G. O. Sars) ; Sars and Norman, however, had in 1872 and 1894 recorded it 

 as taken in two Fjords in 100 — 300 fath. Taken three times in Skager Rak in depths from 280 to 350 fath. 

 (H. J. Hansen), six times west of Ireland, 120 to 454 fath. (Caiman), and several times in the Mediterranean 

 near Capri, 106 — 637 fath. (Caiman). — C. verrucosa var. antarctica Calm, from Lat. 66°2' S., Long. 89°38' E., 

 385 m., will in all probability in the future be recognized as a separate, valid species, and Stebbing has already 

 in Das "Tierreieh" 39. Lief. p. 199 established it as C. antarctica Calm. 



39. Campylaspis globosa n. sp. 



(PI. Ill, figs. 9 a— 9 g; PL IV, figs. 1 a— 1 b). 



Adult Female. The carapace somewhat similar to that in C. verrucosa, but seen from above 

 (fig. 1 a) proportionately broader with the major part of the lateral margins more convex, conspicuously' less 

 than half as long again as broad; seen from the side (fig. 1 b) twice as long as deep, with pseudorostrum 

 somewhat produced and a little upturned; the antennal notch rather deep, the corner below it angular, 

 and the margin above it somewhat convex and rather oblique. Both above and on the sides the carapace 

 is adorned with tubercles, all rounded and differing much in size, the majority arranged into four pairs of 

 longitudinal but somewhat curved or partly irregular rows ; the lateral impression is anteriorly bent consider- 

 ably upwards, and its middle part is deep. Dorsal erect lamella 1 on the two anterior free segments could not 

 be detected. Abdomen considerably shorter than the carapace; on the two anterior segments dorsal tubercles 

 are feebly developed, on third segment scarcely perceptible. 



Second pair of maxillipeds (fig. 9 a and 9 b) rather similar to those in C. verrucosa, but the tooth 

 on the inner angle of both carpus and propodus is small; first and third spine on the dactylus long, while 

 second spine is very short and thin ; the spine on the end of propodus somewhat overreaches the spines on 

 the dactylus. Third pair of maxillipeds (fig. 9 c) somewhat slender; second and third joints without teeth; 

 merus extremely characteristic (fig. 9 d), as it is expanded considerably on the inner side in a low triangle, 

 the proximal half of its inner margin is nearly straight and directed not only forwards but considerably in- 

 wards, while the distal half of the margin forms an angle with the proximal half, is directed considerably 

 outwards and besides somewhat concave; the merus is about half as long again as broad, with a rather 

 small tooth at the base of the distal, strong seta; carpus normally shaped, rather oblong, with about two 

 teeth on the outer margin. First pair of legs (fig. 9e) slender; second joint tapers considerably from the middle 

 to the end; ischium with a tooth on the inner margin; merus very slender, considerably longer but slightly 

 broader than carpus, and both these joints without teeth. Second pair of legs (fig. 9 f) with carpus elongated 

 and very slender, somewhat shorter than the very long and thin dactylus. — Uropods (fig. 9 g) moderately 

 strong; the peduncle scarcely as long as the two posterior abdominal segments together and distinctly less 

 than twice as long as the endopod, with more than half of the inner margin somewhat coarsely serrated, 



