124 A, E. Verrill—Cephalopods of the North Atlantic. 
we will designate as No. 10) was taken from the stomach of a 
sperm whale. e upper jaw of the latter was imperfectly fig- 
ured by Dr. Packard in his article on this subject.* It is the 
largest jaw yet known. These belong to an apparently unde- 
scribed species, which I propose to name Architeuthis princeps,t 
and shall describe more fully farther on. 
The second species, which I consider identical with the Archi- 
teuthis monachus of Steenstrup, is represented by parts of three 
individuals, and seems to be the species most commonly met 
brado 
have been restored from a small squid (Loligo pallida), to which 
this gigantic species seems to be nearly allied in many respects. 
The other parts have been drawn directly from the photographs 
and specimens.t : 
_ Mr. Harvey has published popular accounts of this specimen 
and the previously captured arm of a still larger one, in the 
Maritime Monthly Magazine of St. John, N. B., for Mareh, 
1874, and in several newspapers.§ To him we are, therefore, 
* American Naturalist, vol. vii, p. 91. 
+ This species was named and characterized in a communication made to the 
Connecticut Academy of Sciences, Nov. 18, 1874, and will be described in greater 
graphs and original measurements. Geol- 
al 
Mr. Harvey in the examination and preservation of 
urnal of Science, vol. vii, p. 160; Nature, vol. ix, p 
February 26, 1874; and Appleton’s Journal, Jan. 31, 1874. 
