168 The American Naturalist. [February, 
by Jordan and Bollman (1889) and Goode and Bean. (Proe. U. S. 
Nat. Mus., 1890, pp. 108-110). 
3. Lepophidium prorates. 
4. Lepophidium pardale, 29 fathoms. 
5. Lepophidium microlepis, 76 fathoms. 
6. Lepophidium stigmatistium, 112 fathoms. 
7. Lepophidium emmelas, 306-362 fathoms. 
It will be for the future to determine whether these species are char- 
acteristic of different horizons or whether they inhabit indifferently 
various depths. 
Tueo. GILL. 
The Habitat of the Salamander Linguelapsus annulatus 
Cope.— A single specimen only of unknown habitat has hitherto repre- 
sented this species in the U. S. National Museum. It is, therefore, of 
interest that we are able to describe a second specimen as identified by 
Dr. L. Stejneger from Hot Springs, Arkansas. The specimen is 165 
mm. in total length with a comparatively long tail as compared with 
any of the Amblystomz we have seen. The specimen is still in Dr. 
Stejneger’s hands, so we cannot give an exact description of it, but we 
observed the following facts with regard to it as compared with the de- 
scription of the type in your “ Batrachia of North America.” The 
general color was brown above, crossed by narrow bands of gray, and 
paler below, the first gray band was between the orbits, the second on 
the occiput, the third on the shoulders; between the shoulder and rump 
there were one or two less bands than in the type, those on the tail we 
did not count, two of the bands on the tail united on one side forming 
a loop. 
The head seemed small and the body bulky compared with any other 
salamanders we have seen. The fore and hind limbs when appressed 
to the sides were separated by 3 and parts of 2 other costal interspaces 
asin the type. Taken at Hot Springs, Ark., Nov. 1, 1894. 
—H. H. & C. S. BRImLEY. 
The White Headed Eagle Ate Tonnan. ER = Fhe White 
Headed Eagle is a resident bird on t 
Bay on the north. For more than fifty years Rene ie been a nest on 
the farm now owned by Mrs. Lammers, about half a mile north of the 
Danbury Post-Office. The present one has stood only nine years but 
it was made from the material of another belonging to the same pair 
