363 
Report on Foraminifera. By F. W. Millett. 
Phil. .Trans., vol. civ. p. 407, pi. xv. tig. 30. T. squamata (P. & J.) 
Haensler, 1885, Neues Jahrb. iur Min., Beil. Bd. iv. p. 29, pi iii. 
fig. 30. Idem, 1890, Abhandl. schweiz. pal. Gesell., vol. xvii. p. 65, 
pi. x. figs. 27-29, 40. T. squamata (P. & J.) Egger, 1893, Abhandl. 
k. bayer. Akad. Wiss., 01. II, vol. xviii. p. 264, pi. v. figs. 4-6. 
What may be called the inflated form of the species is the com- 
monest of all the arenaceous foraminifera in the Malay Archipelago, 
and it occurs at most of the Stations. The specimens are small, but 
characteristic. 
The 4 Gazelle ’ Stations are Kerguelen and Mauritius. 
Trochammina ochracea Williamson sp., plate V. fig. 12. 
Rotalina ochracea Williamson, 1858, Bee. Foram. Gt. Britain, 
p. 55, pi. iv. fig. 112, and pi. v. fig. 113. Trochammina squamata 
(P. & J.) Parker and Jones, 1865, Phil. Trans., vol. civ. p. 407, 
pi. xv. fig. 81. T. ochracea (Williamson) Balkwill and Millett, 1884, 
Journ. Microscopy and Nat. Sci., vol. iii. p. 25, pi. i. fig. 7. 
This form is very rare, and has been observed only at Station 3. 
Hitherto it has been recorded only from the British Isles, from 
the Arctic Begions (Parker and Jones), and from the Channel Islands 
(Halkyard). 
Trochammina plicata Terquem sp., plate V. fig. 13. 
Patellina plicata Terquem, 1876, Anim. Plage de Dunkerque, 
2 me lasc., p. 72, pi. viii. fig. 9. Trochammina plicata (Terq.), Balk- 
will and Millett, 1884, Journ. Microscopy and Nat. Sci., vol. iii. 
p. 26, pi. i. fig. 8. T. plicata (Terq.) Halkyard, 1889, Trans, and 
Ann. Nat. Bept. Manchester Micr. Soc., p. (10) pi. i. fig. 11. 
This delicate scale-like form occurs only at Station 25, and is 
there, as elsewhere, extremely rare. 
Its general distribution is the same as that of T. ochracea. 
Trochammina nitida Brady. 
T. nitida Brady, 1881, Quart. Journ. Micr. Sci., vol. xxi. n.s., 
p. 52. T. nitida Brady, 1884, Chall. Bept., p. 339, pi. xli. figs. 5, 6. 
T. nitida (Brady) Goes, 1894, K. Svenska Vet.-Akad. Handl., vol. 
xxv. p. 30, pi. vi. figs. 225-230. 
At Station 6 there are some fine typical examples of this rare 
form ; but elsewhere, although the characteristic flatness of the 
superior face is apparent, there are fewer chambers in the convolu- 
tions, and the relationship with T. injlata is in many instances well 
marked. Goes, who reports it from Spitzbergen, describes it as an 
emaciated form of T. injlata, and gives the number of segments in 
the last convolution as 6-9. In the majority of the Malay specimens 
the number of segments to the convolution is six ; the colour is 
always grey. 
