FOSSIL FORAMINIFERA FROM THE WEST INDIES. 67 



Quinqueloculina cuvieriana d'Orbigny. 



Quinqueloculina cuvieriana d'Orbigny, in De la Sagra, Hist. Fis. Pol. Nat. Cuba, "Foram- 

 iniferes," p. 190, plate 11, figs, 19 to 21, 1839. 



A few specimens with the typical ornamentation of the species 

 occurred at Zone I, Rio Cana, and Bluff 2, Cercado de Mao, Santo 

 Domingo. These are almost exactly like the Cuban monograph fig- 

 ures, but very different from the figures assigned to this species by later 

 authors. 



Quinqueloculina auberiana d'Orbigny. 



Quinqueloculina auberiana d'Orbigny, in De la Sagra, Hist. Fis. Pol. Nat. Cuba, "Foram- 

 iniferes," p. 193, plate 12, figs. 1 to 3, 1839. 



Very typical specimens occur in material from Zone H, Rio Cana, 

 and Bluffs 2 and 3, Cercado de Mao, Santo Domingo. These are more 

 closely like the original figures of the type than of later figures of other 

 authors. 



Specimens are rare in the Bowden marl of Jamaica, but are very 

 typical, like the Santo Domingo specimens, and like the original figures 

 given by d'Orbigny in his Cuba monograph. 



Typical specimens also occur in the Miocene of the Panama Canal 

 Zone and Virginia. 



Quinqueloculina pulchella d'Orbigny. 



Miliolina pulchella (d'Orbigny) H. B. Brady, Rep. Voy. Challenger, Zoology, vol. 9, p. 174, 

 plate 6, figs. 13, 14, 1884. 



A few specimens with characteristic ornamentations occur at Zones 

 H and I, Rio Cana, and Bluffs 2 and 3, Cercado de Mao, Santo Domingo. 



Quinqueloculina gualteriana d'Orbigny. 



Quinqueloculina gualteriana d'Orbigny, in De la Sagra, Hist. Fis. Pol. Nat. Cuba, "Foram- 

 iniferes," p. 186, plate 11, figs. 1 to 3, 1839. 



Specimens seemingly identical with this species as figured by 

 d'Orbigny occur at Zones H and I, Rio Cana, and there are question- 

 able specimens from Bluff 3, Cercado de Mao, Santo Domingo; but 

 they are rare, two being the most from any one station. 



Quinqueloculina species cf. Q. kerimbatica (Heron-Allen and Earland). 

 (Plate 13, Figure 5.) 



Miliolina kerimbatica Heron-Allen and Earland, Trans. Zool. Soo. London, vol. 20, p. 574, 

 plate 43, figs. 13 to 23, 1915. 



Large specimens seemingly identical with the recent species described 

 by Heron-Allen and Earland from the Kerimba Archipelago off the 

 southeastern coast of Africa occur both at Bluffs 2 and 3, Cercado de 

 Mao, Santo Domingo. In their size, shape, and peculiar type of 

 coarse, irregularly reticulate ornamentation these fossil specimens are 

 strikingly like the recent African-Indian Ocean specimens. The same 



