28 
s. S. BüCKMAN, 
(Schwed. Südpolar-Exp. 
Locality: Cockburn Island (13), off Graham Land, Antarctica. 
Fo 7 'uiation: Glauconitic Bank. 
Material: Eleven specimens all more or less crushed, and the one very- small 
specimen with the beak broken off. 
Other Localities: Guppy’s specimens are from the Miocene of Jamaica. 
Terebratula vitreoides; Tate (? Woods). 
Plate II, fig. 3. 
1880. Terebratula vitreoides; Tate, Austr. Pall., PI. VIII, fig. 5. 
Remarks: One specimen seems to agree in a general way with the above-cited 
figure of what Tate calls ‘A. vitreoides^ WOODS’, but there may be much doubt 
as to whether Tate’s species agrees with WOODS’: it is more elongate and much 
thinner. There is another small specimen with similar proportions. 
The test is similar to that of T. lccta\ and in the largest specimen the radiating 
grooves are very marked. This form is much narrower than what is placed as A. Ac/«. 
Locality: Cockburn Island (13), off Graham Land, Antarctica. 
Formation: Glauconitic Bank. 
Material: Two specimens, somewhat imperfect. 
Other localities: Tate (p. 144) gives the following as localities and strata: 
‘Lower Aldinga — glauconitic limestones, Blanche Point, Aldinga Bay; and Middle 
Murravian, calcareous sands at Blanchetown.’ 
Terebratula sp. B. 
Plate II, fig. 4. 
Remarks: There is a small, narrowly elliptical specimen which is like the 
example figured as A. vitreoides; but it is too narrow to be the actual young 
form of the shell depicted in PI. II, fig. 3 as the growth lines show. The specimen 
is almost without test. 
Locality: It is from the same stratum and locality as the foregoing, and is evi- 
dently closely allied to them. 
Genus Terebratulina, d’Orbigny. 
Terebratulina lenticularis, Tate. 
Plate III, fig. 4. 
1880. Terebratulina lenticularis^ Tatf:, Austr. Tert. Palliobr., Proc. Phil. Soc. Ade- 
laide, p. 20, PI. VII, fig. 4. 
