and Species of Diatoms from the South Pacific. 187 
STAURONEIS. 
Stauronets Australis, n. sp., Grev.—Hlliptical-oblong, 
bluntly apiculate ; strie not reaching the median line, 22 in 
001"; stauros very short and narrow, but well-defined. 
Length -0047". (Plate IV. fig. 13.) 
Hab.—Harvey Bay, Queensland, in a dredging sent by 
Dr Roberts. 
A rare species, and sufficiently distinguished by the ex- 
ceedingly short, narrow, and sharply defined stauros. 
DESCRIPTION OF PLATE IV. 
Fig. 15. Grammatophora pusilla, . : . front view. 
1. Amphora magnifica. 
2. BY pulchra. 
3 a undulata. 
4 . jlexuosa. 
5. BA sinuata. 
9. Amphiprora Thwaitesiana, : . front view. 
6 F Kiitsingiana, . , . front view. 
7 RS Meneghiniana, . ; . front view. 
8. if, Brebissoniana, . ; . front view. 
10. - rectangularis, . F . front view. 
12. 4 Rabenhorstiana, ‘ . front view. 
ie * Jolisiana, ‘ : . front view. 
14. Navicula diversa, : : : . Side view. 
13. Stauroneis Australis, ; : . side view. 
All the figures are x 400 diameters. 
The Bee-hive British Dwellings at Bosphrennis and Chapel 
Huny, near Penzance. By R. Epmonps, Esq., Plymouth.* 
The recently discovered ‘‘ Bee-hive Hut” at Bosphrennis 
in Zennor which attracted so much attention at the Truro 
meeting of the Cambrian Archeological Association in 
August last is described in last month’s Archeologia Cam- 
brensis (pp. 120-129) by our Cambrian friend, EK. L. B. 
He thinks, however, that “no similar remains in the same 
* Read at the Annual Meeting of the Royal Ins itution of Cornwall, on the 
29th of May 1868. 
