TELEOSTEI. 



97 



the English Crag specimens are referred ; and i see no reason why 

 they should not be placed definitely in the genus Gadus. 



Prof. Van Beneden (Bull. Ac. Eoy. Belg., Ser. 2., Vol. XXXI., 

 Plate ii., fig. 13, p. 501, 1871) has figured an otolith from the 

 Antwerp Crag, and referred it to his Trigloides Dejardinii, and 

 another said to belong to (he recent Trigla gvrnardus (given as 

 Jdrundo in description of plates). Neither of these specimens has 

 anything to do with the genus Trigla, all the species of which 

 have otoliths quite unlike these figures. There has evidently 

 been some slip in the determination of the recent specimen, 

 as already noticed by Herr E. Koken (loc. cit.). Both these 

 otoliths are Gadoid, and that from the Antwerp Crag agrees with 

 the specimens from the Suffolk Crags, which are now referred to 

 Gadus elegans. 



Genus ARIUS, C. & V. 

 Plate X., Fig. 17. 



Mr. E. C. Moor of Great Bealings has a fragment o£ a pectoral 

 spine of a large Siluroid fish, from the Red Crag Nodule-bed, 

 Foxhalj, which probably belongs to Arius (^Siluriis) Egertoni, an 

 Eocene form ; and the specimen has most likely been derived 

 from beds of that age. 



Genus BARBTJS, Cuvier. 



BaRBUS vulgaris? FLEMING. 



{Barbel.) 



(Vert. Forest Bed, p. 134, Plate XVIII., Figs. 11-14.) 



Some pharyngeal teeth and bones from the Forest-bed at West 

 Runton have been, with some doubt, referred to this species. 



Genus LEUCISCUS, Cuvier. 



Leuciscus butilis, linnmus. 



(Roach.) 



(Vert. Forest Bed, p. 125, Plate XVIII., Fig. 17.) 



Several pharyngeal bones and numerous teeth from the Forest- 

 bed at West Runton have been referred to this species. 

 The species is now living in Europe north of the Alps. 



o 63855. 



