EEPORT ON THE BRACHIOPODA. 



15 



1450 



2160 



100 to 150 



110 to 200 



15 



75 to 725 



0) 



7 to 50 



Leach, = T. glabra, Leacli, 

 1788. 



T. jplicata, Pliilippi, 



Waldheimia tenera, Jeffreys, Proc. Zool Soc, 1878, 

 and Annals and Mag. ISTat. Hist., Sept. 1876. 

 A very delicate thin shell, much smaller than W. 

 cranium. 

 *(})Waldheimia loijuillii, Dav., Proc. Royal Soc, vol 

 xxvii. p. 438, 1878. One specimen only dredged by 

 Challenger Expedition. 

 * Waldheimia Jiergueleiiensis, Dav., Proc. Royal Soc, vol. 

 xxvii. p. 437, 1878. Abundant. 



Waldheimia floridana, Pourtales, Bidl. Mus. Comp. 

 Zool, vol i. p. 127, 1868. This is a good species. I 

 cannot agree mth Dr Gwyn Jeffreys, who places it as 

 a synonym of Wald. aeptigera (his W. se2}tafa). 



Waldheimia lenticularis, Deshayes, Mag. ZooL, pi. xii. 

 1841. A large, beautiful, abimdant, and well-char- 

 acterised species. 



Waldheimia sejptigera, Loven, Index Moll Scand., p. 29, 

 1846. (Ter. septata, Pliilippi, Fauna Moll. SiciliK, 

 vol. ii. p. 67, 1844, according to Dr Gwyn Jefii-eys, 

 not so according to Sequenza, Dall, Friele, and 

 others.) An excellent species, abundant and weU- 

 characterised, I prefer to retain Loveu's name, 

 as I feel uncertain whether it is really Philippi's 

 species. 

 (1) Waldheimia raphalis, Dall., Am. Journ. Conch., vi. 

 pis. iii. vii., figs, a-d, 1870. Dr Jeffreys states, Proc. 

 ZooL Soc, p. 407, 1878: "Wald. raphcelis of DaU, 

 also from the North Pacific, looks like a gigantic 

 variety of T. septata. My largest specimen of T. sep- 

 tata (septigera) measures an inch and three-tenths in 

 length." W. raphaslis is known only by a single 

 specimen said to come from Japan, it may be a variety 

 only of W. septigera, 



Waldheimia grayi, Dav., Proc. Zool. Soc, p. 76, pi. 



Greenland and Norway ; 

 oft' Shetland and Faroe ; 

 South - West Coast of 

 France ; Cape Breton, op- 

 posite southern extremity 

 of the Department des 

 Landes (Fischer) ; outside 

 Vigo Bay (M'Andrew) ; 

 St Margaret's Bay, Nova 

 Scotia (WiUis) (?); Nor- 

 thern Asia and Japan (A. 

 Adams) (i). Fossil.- Up- 

 per Tertiaries, South Italy, 

 and Scandinavia. 

 North Atlantic, lat. 56° 11' N. 

 long. 37° 41' W. 



Off Valparaiso. 



Off Marion Island ; West of 

 Kerguelen Island ; South 

 of Kerguelen Island. 



Florida Reefs. 



Straits of Fouveaux, New Zea- 

 land. Fossil: Upper Ter- 

 tiaries, New Zealand. 



Finmark, Scandinavian, and 

 North British Seas; Shet- 

 land, between Shetland and 

 Faroe Islands. Fossil : Up- 

 per Tertiaries, South of 

 Italy (Jefireys) (?). 



Japan (1). 



Japan, 7 fathoms (A. Adams) j 



